Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Home
My WebLink
About
041822Corr
JEFFERSON COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS 2022 CORRESPONDENCE DATE OF DATE ORIGINATING CORRESPONDENCE DOCUMENT RECEIVED PARTY Phil, we're counting on you 4/7/2022 4/7/2022 FRED HUTCHINSON CANCER RESEARCH CENTER News Release: Unprecedented blow down and 4/7/2022 4/7/2022 Olympic National Forest lingering winter conditions limit access on Olympic National Forest 4/7/2022 4/7/2022 NACo Join NACo and White House officials today for a briefing on the Bipartisan Innovation Act 4/7/2022 4l7/2022 Port Ludlow Village Council '** REMINDER *** PLVC Board Meeting Thursday, April 7, 2022 4/7/2022 4/7/2022 John Vezina, WSDOT/Ferries Division WSF Weekly Update Julianne Stanford 4/7/2022 4/7/2022 Naval Magazine Indian Island Public NEWS RELEASE - Security training exercise Affairs Officer scheduled at Naval Magazine Indian Island on 4/13 4/7/2022 4/7/2022 NACo Coronavirus pandemic resources for counties — April 7, 2022 News Release: Unprecedented blow down and 4/7/2022 4/7/2022 Olympic National Forest lingering winter conditions limit access on Olympic National Forest STEPHEN STREUFERT I he/his (why 4/7/2022 4/7/2022 pronouns matter) Maritime High School - State Supplemental Budget Chief Development Officer, Northwest Funding Secured! Thank You! Maritime Center 4/7/2022 4/7/2022 Washington Counties I WSAC Friday 5 1 NCGM I COVID-19 I Energy 4/8/2022 4/8/2022 John Vezina, WSDOT/Ferries Division WSF Update 4/8/2022 4/8/2022 Ask MRSC Ask MRSC: April 2022 4/8/2022 4/8/2022 Bert Loomis New Jefferson County road serving Port Ludlow Olympic Terrace 2 Phase 2 [37 homes] 4/8/2022 4/8/2022 Washington State Association of Counties County Virtual Assembly I April 11 4/8/2022 4/8/2022 Recovery Cafe/Dove House Join us at Recovery Cafe this month 4/8/2022 4/8/2022 Lynn Sorensen KPTZ listener questions for Monday April 11, 2022 KPTZ Virus Watch Team BOCC Update 4/9/2022 4/11/2022 NACo This Week in Photos 4/10/2022 4/11/2022 Washington State Department of Washington State Department of Commerce Weekly Commerce Digest Bulletin 4/10/2022 4/11/2022 Northwest Maritime Center Summer programs for all ages! 4/11/2022 4/11/2022 Local 20/20 Local 20/20 Weekly Announcements Correspondence may be viewed attached to the BoCC Agenda each week on the County Webpage or contact the County Administator's Office by calling, 360 385 9100 JEFFERSON COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS 2022 CORRESPONDENCE DATE OF DATE ORIGINATING CORRESPONDENCE DOCUMENT RECEIVED PARTY 4/11/2022 4/11/2022 NACo NACo Achievement Awards deadline this Friday, April 15 Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Licensed Establishments in Unincorporated Areas of 4/11/2022 4/11/2022 Board Jefferson County for Expiration Date of 09.30.22: Pacala, Inc Licensed Establishments in Unincorporated Areas of 4/11/2022 4/11/2022 Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Jefferson County for Expiration Date of 07.31.22: Board Beachcombers Cafe t Fort Flagler; The Meadwerks at Wilderbee Farm 4/12/2022 4/12/2022 Angela Gyurko Election Worker Appreciation Day Pres, LWVJefferson County Unit at Large 4/12/2022 4/12/2022 Washington State Parks and Recreation Washington State Parks E-News, April 2022 Commission 4/12/2022 4/12/2022 Olympic Community of Health OCH Community Briefing I Apr 12, 2022 Join County Auditor, Shoona Riggs, to Hear About 4/12/2022 4/12/2022 Clallam EDC our Next Election Cycle on Coffee with Colleen Wednesday at 8am 4/12/2022 4/12/2022 The Food Co-op, Port Townsend 0You're Invited to our 50th Celebration! 4/12/2022 4/12/2022 The Chamber of Jefferson County Today in Downtown Port Townsend 4/12/2022 4/12/2022 Lissy Andros, Executive Director Please join us Wednesday for Rural Development Forks Chamber of Commerce Initiatives... Heather Freund, General Crime updated information on Washington rise in overdose 4/12/2022 4/12/2022 Advocate/Outreach Coordinator deaths Dove House Advocacy Services 4/12/2022 4/12/2022 NACo County News County News Now —April 12, 2022 4/13/2022 4/13/2022 Barbara Morey, Housing Advocate Sand Point Cottage Housing breaks ground; Sound Foundations NW builds 200th tiny home! 4/13/2022 4/13/2022 FRED HUTCHINSON CANCER Donate your vehicle to Fred Hutch RESEARCH CENTER 4/13/2022 4/13/2022 Washington State Department of Planners' Update Newsletter - April 2022 Commerce 4/13/2022 4/13/2022 Port Ludlow Village Council COVID-19 Bi-weekly Report - 4/12/2022 Drew Rosanbalm 4/13/2022 4/13/2022 Assistant Region Manager- State Lands Penny Wise timber sale Olympic Region, DNR Correspondence may be viewed attached to the BoCC Agenda each week on the County Webpage or contact the County Administator's Office by calling, 360 385 9100 jeffbocc From: Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center <annualgiving@fredhutch.org> Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 10:01 AM To: jeffbocc Subject: Phil, we're counting on you ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Help accelerate lifesaving discoveries. Give now! F ED HUTCH CURES START HERE' Phil, people facing cancer in your city need hope! We're getting closer to ending cancer. And supporters like you have a lot to do with that. You've partnered with our researchers to turn big, bold ideas into lifesaving treatments. The question is not whether we will one day end cancer, it's when. Your generosity today will accelerate the next amazing advance. e need your help to raise $10,000 by May 31 for our 222 Research Fund Drive to End Cancer. Right now in our labs, Fred Hutch scientists are pioneering some of the most innovative research on the planet. z We're on the verge of even bigger — and bolder — discoveries. But much of this research is still in early stages and doesn't qualify for government funding yet. It depends on people like you. Let's End Cancer Together Your support today will help advance breakthroughs like Dr. John Lee's work to create scientific models that closely mimic cancers that arise naturally in humans. He's working on a series of models for various subtypes of prostate cancer, and he hopes to use the same pioneering technique to study other cancers. That would be a big step toward more precisely targeted treatments. People around the world are counting on you to push groundbreaking science like this to the limit. Lives are hanging in the balance. Please be generous. Our 2022 Research Fund Drive ends on May 31. Please IN 111111111111!��!illlll - - - 3 FRED HUTCHINSON CANCER RESEARCH CENTER 1100 Fairview Ave. N. I P.O. Box 19024 1 Seattle, WA 98109 Phone: 206.667.4399 1 Email: annualgiving@fredhutch.org If you do not wish to receive future email updates from Fred Hutch, you can unsubscribe. © 2022 Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy. Fred Hutch is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. www.fredhutch.org jeffbocc From: Olympic National Forest <corina.rendon@usda.gov> Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 4:01 PM To: jeffbocc Subject: News Release: Unprecedented blow down and lingering winter conditions limit access on Olympic National Forest ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Olympic National Forest Forest Service News Release Contact: Corina Rendbn corina.rendon .usda.ov Unprecedented blow down and lingering winter conditions limit access on Olympic National Forest Olympia, WA, April 7, 2022— This winter the Olympic National Forest experienced multiple atmospheric river events that caused unprecedented damage across the forest. Staff and volunteers have been working aggressively to clear blow down to ensure visitors can safely access the forest but due to the high volume of downed trees and low snow levels some areas remain inaccessible. Visitors to the forest should be aware that general spring maintenance and operations of roads and recreation sites may be delayed while crews prioritize clearing blow down on high use roads. Areas where access is limited include: • Skokomish Drainage, FS-Road 23 network • Hamma Hamma Drainage, FS-Road 25 network • Donkey Creek Area, FS- Road 22 network When visiting any area of the forest this spring visitors should practice the following tips to ensure a safe trip. • While hiking, look up and look around. There may remaining trees or limbs that could still fall. • Some parking areas may be limited due to snow or debris; do not park where you may hinder traffic or where additional debris may fall. • Be prepared with a backup destination as access may be limited or your vehicle may not be able to make the trip, it is okay to turn around. • Be cautious when driving and watch for vehicles that maybe crossing lanes in efforts to avoid trees or brush in the roadway. • Pack all recreation safet�g nti l , dress appropriately, bring extra food, water, and clothing items. Winter conditions persist at higher elevations. Recreation sites and roads are opening as conditions allow and maintenance is completed including the removal of blow down. Visitors are encouraged to report significant road or trail damage by sending an email to the Olympic National Forest. For updates on recreation sites on the forest visit the forest's Recreation_ Conditions Report or call a forest office. USDA is an equal OpporrWnity provider, employer, and lender. Olympic National Forest 1 1835 Black Lk Blvd SW, Olympia, WA 98512 Unsubscribe jeffbocc@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by corina.rendon@usda.gov powered by Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 8:10 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Join NACo and White House officials today for a briefing on the Bipartisan Innovation Act From: NACo Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 8:08:57 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Join NACo and White House officials today for a briefing on the Bipartisan Innovation Act ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Having trouble viewing this email? Click Here 1.1 ' 14 21 ki L411-01 : c • ' • r I TODAY, APRIL 7 ( 3 P.M. EDT Please join the National Association of Counties (NACo) and representatives from the White House today at 3 p.m. EDT for a briefing on the Bipartisan Innovation Act and key provisions important to counties. The Bipartisan Innovation Act, also known as the America COMPETES Act and the United States Innovation and Competition Act, is bipartisan legislation that would invest $250 billion into America's scientific research, development of artificial intelligence and space exploration in the face of growing economic, technological and military competition from China. White House Briefing for County Leaders: The Bipartisan Innovation Act & Key Provisions for Counties DATEToday, April 7 TIME 3 p.m. EDT Specifically, these bills include investments to increase production of American -made semiconductors, strengthening supply chain resiliency, reinvigorate U.S. scientific research and bolster America's economic and national security. BRIEFING SPEAKERS SAMEERA FAZILI Deputy Director, National Economic Council LUKAS MCGOWAN Senior Advisor, White House Office of Intergovernmental Affairs CHRISTOPHER SLEVIN Deputy Director, White House Office of Legislative Affairs PJ 660 North Capitol Street, NW, Suite 400 Washington, D.C. 20001 M Did someone forward you this email? Sign up to stay up-to-date on topics affecting America's counties! Click here to unsubscribe. Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 8:37 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: *** REMINDER *** PLVC Board Meeting Thursday, April 7, 2022 From: Port Ludlow Village Council Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 8:35:58 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: *** REMINDER *** PLVC Board Meeting Thursday, April 7, 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. �counc s w TO CIT, PRESERVE, PROMOTE, AND UNIFY You are invited to participate in the upcoming April PLVC Board Meeting scheduled for April 7th, 2022, at 3:00 p.m. This will be an in -person meeting — location as follows: South Bay Community Association (SBCA) The Bay Club — Auditorium 120 Spinnaker Place Port Ludlow, WA 98365 360-437-2208 Following is the April meeting agenda. We will make any modifications to the agenda at the start of the meeting if necessary. And we are pleased to announce that JeffCo WA Slwriff.loe No% will be our guest speaker. The Bay Club is following all recommendations that JeffCo Department of Public Health for COVID-19 mitigation currently has in place. In this fluid world that we are living in right now, those recommendations could turn into mandates. Always be prepared for the unexpected and let's all be respectful for those masked or who are at higher risk around us. Meeting Agenda z I. Call the April 7, 2022, PLVC Board meeting to order, Declaration of a Quorum, Protocol Roberts Rules for Small Boards, this meeting is being recorded — Changes to the agenda 11. Stakeholder updates: (3 — 5 minutes per update) a. Port Ludlow Associates — Diana Smeland — President b. Jefferson County — Greg BrothertDn — JeffCo Commissioner — District 3 111. Guest Speaker., Jefferson County Sheriff Joe Nole IV. Homeowners Association Updates: (3 — 5 minutes per update) a. LMC — Allan Kiesler. PLVC Board Member and President, LMC b. SBCA — Gil Skinner. PLVC Board Member and President,. SBCA V. Citizen Comments two (2) minutes each VI. Board Business/PeportslAcLions/Dismssions/Old - New Business a. Approval of Board Meeting Minutes, March 3, 2022 b. Prior Month Financial Report and Summary VII. Closing remarks — Evaluation - Adjournment Next PLVC Board Workshop, 04.19.22 at 3: DO pm, at The Bay Club - Conference Room Next PLVC Board Meeting, OS.05.22 at 3:00 pm, The Beach Club — BayView Room View or download the meeting agenda HERE. Your Village Council is a 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation whose purpose is to be a unifying force and information conduit for the benefit of all Port Ludlow residents Port Ludlow Village Council I Post Office Box 65012, Port Ludlow, WA 98365 Unsubscribe qbrotherton@co.iefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by portludlowvillagecouncileblast@gmaii.com 3 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 12:05 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: WSF Weekly Update From: Vezina, John Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 12:03:48 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) Subject: WSF Weekly Update ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. We had a small setback in our service restoration efforts this week because of an unusually high number of relief requests among our employees, likely due to a common cold affecting many in our workforce. This is an unfortunate example of why this process will be a slow turn of the dial. While our Service Restoration Plan (Plan) details our steps to restore service to pre -pandemic levels on a route -by - route basis, we can't provide a set timeline for each run because of unpredictable factors like this, as well as the amount of new employees we're able to recruit, then complete required training to ultimately come on board with Ten new terminal employees completed orientation and training last week and are now out working throughout our system. Because our service restoration efforts are dependent on this uncertain crewing availability, we also cannot guarantee that we'll be able to move quickly down the Plan's route prioritization list, one after another. We may need to briefly pause our efforts before moving on to the next run. As outlined in our latest progress report, we're currently focused on our Seattle/Bainbridge route, which is in its trial service stage (Stage 3). Most of our other routes remain in the alternate service stage (Stage 2), running alternate service schedules with sailings added daily if crewing is available. Knowing that this is challenging and frustrating for so many riders, we are committed to keeping you updated throughout our service restoration process. WSP honors two WSF employees for life-saving efforts Washington State Patrol recognized two of our employees this week for their response to a medical emergency at our Fauntleroy terminal on Nov. 9. Chief Engineer Marc Marcotte and Ticket Seller Lois Kaestner received a WSP Commendation Award for life-saving efforts after a customer started having trouble breathing. Lois was first to notice the emergency and immediately got the attention of Trooper Samantha Metcalf. Marc, who was reporting to work aboard Kittitas, volunteered to help Lois and the trooper with medical assistance until paramedics arrived. Kudos to everyone involved for stepping up to in a life - threatening situation! WSP Capt. Christina Martin presents Chief Engineer Marc Marcotte with a WSP Commendation Award. Ticket Seller Lois Kaestner was presented her WSP Commendation Award at our Fauntleroy terminal. Ferry Riders Opinion Group survey Share your thoughts about us in the latest Ferry Riders Opinion Group survey hosted by the Washington State Transportation Commission. Casual, recreational and regular riders, as well as those who are interested in ferry issues and management are welcome to take the current survey now through April 18, or sign up to ioin the survey panel to ensure you're included in this and all future surveys. Thanks for your participation and input! Patty Rubstello Assistant Secretary, WSDOT/Ferries Division STAY CONNECTED: �1• 1ti�I "w. Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 2:25 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: NEWS RELEASE - Security training exercise scheduled at Naval Magazine Indian Island on 4/13 Attachments: RELEASE 220407- Security training exercise scheduled at Naval Magazine Indian Island.pdf From: Stanford, Julianne E CIV USN COMNAVREG NW BGR WA (USA) Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 2:22:31 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) Subject: NEWS RELEASE - Security training exercise scheduled at Naval Magazine Indian Island on 4/13 Good afternoon, Attached and below is a news release regarding a security training exercise scheduled at Naval Magazine Indian Island for Wednesday, April 13, 2022. For more information, please contact Naval Magazine Indian Island Public Affairs Officer Julianne Stanford at (360)-867- 8525 or her email at julianne.e.stanford.civ@us.navy.mil. Very respectfully, Julianne Stanford Naval Magazine Indian Island Public Affairs Officer Desk: (360)-396-5393 Cell: (360)-867-8525 NEW email address: julianne.e.stanford.civ@us.navy.mil https://www.facebook.com/NAVMAGIndianlsland/ RELEASE# 22-0407 April 7, 2022 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE SECURITY TRAINING EXERCISE SCHEDULED AT INDIAN ISLAND PORT HADLOCK, Wash., - Naval Magazine Indian Island has a security training exercise scheduled for Wednesday, April 13, 2022. Training activities will include the use of blank ammunition, loud sirens and bright blue flashing lights near the installation's main gate. The main gate will be temporarily closed for a short period of time during this exercise, however that should have a minimal impact to traffic in the area. Announcements will be broadcasted from the base's loudspeaker notification system. Residents living in the communities surrounding Indian Island and installation personnel could notice increased noise levels and activities associated with the training exercises those days. The Navy conducts these types of security exercises at installations across the world to ensure readiness and verify response procedures. NMII thanks the community for their continued support and understanding. For more information on this release, please contact Naval Magazine Indian Island Public Affairs Officer Julianne Stanford at 360-867-8525 or her email at julianne.e.stanford.civ@us.navy.mil. For additional information about Naval Magazine Indian Island, please visit: https://www.cnic.navy.mii/regions/cnrnw/installations/naval_magazine_indian_island.html or visit the installation's Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/NAVMAGIndianIsland. -USN- Naval Magazine Indian Island News Release RELEASE# 22-0407 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE April 7, 2022 SECURITY TRAINING EXERCISE SCHEDULED AT INDIAN ISLAND PORT HADLOCK, Wash., - Naval Magazine Indian Island has a security training exercise scheduled for Wednesday, April 13, 2022. Training activities will include the use of blank ammunition, loud sirens and bright blue flashing lights near the installation's main gate. The main gate will be temporarily closed for a short period of time during this exercise, however that should have a minimal impact to traffic in the area. Announcements will be broadcasted from the base's loudspeaker notification system. Residents living in the communities surrounding Indian Island and installation personnel could notice increased noise levels and activities associated with the training exercises those days. The Navy conducts these types of security exercises at installations across the world to ensure readiness and verify response procedures. NMII thanks the community for their continued support and understanding. For more information on this release, please contact Naval Magazine Indian Island Public Affairs Officer Julianne Stanford at 360-867-8525 or her email atjulianne.e.stanford.civ@us.navy.mil. For additional information about Naval Magazine Indian Island, please visit: https://www.cnic.navy.mil/regions/cnmw/installations/naval magazine indian island.html or visit the installation's Facebook page at hgps://www.facebook.com/NAVMAGIndianlsland. -USN- Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 2:40 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Coronavirus pandemic resources for counties —April 7, 2022 From: NACo Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 2:37:51 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Coronavirus pandemic resources for counties — April 7, 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Having trouble viewing this email? Click Here CORONAVIRUS ' ID- 9WTK RESOURCES FOR COUNTIES NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF COUNTIES I NACo.org/coronavirus April 7, 2022 NACo RELEASES ANALYSIS OF PRESIDENT'S FY 2023 BUDGET REQUEST NACo's analysis includes highlights of proposed cuts, eliminations or increases to key federal programs in the president's budget request for Fiscal Year (FY) 2023 and a section -by -section summary of the budget, outlining items relevant to counties and our COVID-19 response and recovery efforts. EXPLORE ANALYSIS Fiscal Recovery Fund Project and Expenditure Reports are due to Treasury by April 30 All counties must submit a Project and Expenditure Report to the U.S. Treasury Department by April 30, 2022. • For counties that have a population of more than 250,000 or who received more than $10 million in fiscal recovery funds, this will be the second quarterly report, covering the period from Jan. 1, 2022 to March 31, 2022. • For all other counties, this will be the first annual report, covering the period from March 3, 2021 to March 31, 2022. See Treasury's step-by-step video of how to complete your county's reporting and Compliance and Reporting Guidance for more information. LEARN MORE I NACo's ARPA RECOVERY FUND RESOURCE HUB Negotiations on COVID-19 supplemental legislation stalled in Senate On April 4, a group of senators unveiled a bipartisan, $10 billion COVID-19 supplemental appropriations bill to support the ongoing domestic response to the public health emergency. Of particular note, the final agreement includes bipartisan legislation that would provide additional flexibilities for counties to invest American Rescue Plan Act funds. However, prospects for getting the pandemic aid package to President Biden's desk before the two -week April recess are dwindling with new disagreements over certain provisions included in the bill. LEARN MORE Counties receive Public Health AmeriCorps grants On April 6, AmeriCorps and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention awarded over 80 grants to counties and organizations across the country to help communities tackle COVID-19 and develop the next generation of public health leaders. LEARN MORE DEADLINE NEXT WEEK: APPLY TODAY FOR A NACo ACHIEVEMENT AWARD Application Deadline is April 15 Earn national recognition and share your county's innovative programs by applying for a NACo Achievement Award. LEARN MORE ( QUESTIONS? EMAIL AWARDS@NACo.org 3 Celebrate National County Government Month and share how your county is driving COVID-19 recovery Each April, National County Government Month is a celebration of counties and an excellent opportunity to showcase how you are serving residents and driving recovery from COVID-19. LEARN MORE + YJ Join NACo's Untold Stories campaign and tell your county's story Counties across the country continue to invest in pandemic recovery and plan for the future. Tell the story of your county's efforts. Use our online form to tell your county's story, and visit NACo.org/UntoldStories to learn more. LEARN MORE I SHARE YOUR STORY FISCAL RECOVERY FUND SPOTLIGHT: PUBLIC HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE Counties are investing critical American Rescue Plan Fiscal Recovery Funds in county health departments capabilities and bolstering the public health workforce. Learn more below and explore NACo's full issue brief on county investments of Recovery Funds to support public health infrastructure. LEARN MORE I FULL ARPA INVESTMENT ANALYSIS SERIES 00 ADDRESSING THE NEED The COVID-19 pandemic response has highlighted the importance of the need for strong local health departments. 21% Local health departments experienced a loss of 21 percent of their workforce capacity over the past decade, which has hindered many counties' ability to provide a timely and robust local public health response to COVID-19. In 2019, 15 percent of local health departments reported decreased budgets, and more than 80 percent experienced a decreased or stagnant preparedness budget making it increasingly difficult to address COVID-19 and other complex public health challenges. COUNTIES PLAN TO INVEST RECOVERY FUNDS TO $ *3 ' III , W"Wl I , I ,, 1 BOLSTER PUBLIC HEALTH TECHNOLOGY Despite the need for increased public health services critical to the COVID-19 response, 84 percent of health departments have either reduced or maintained their level of emergency preparedness services. STRENGTHEN MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT CAPACITY STREAMLINE ELECTRONIC PREPARE FOR FUTURE INCREASE HMTH ACCESS HEALTH RECORDS PANDEMICS FOR UNDERSERVED COMMUNITIES TOP RECOVERY FUND QUESTIONS & ANSWERS` NACo staff are answering your questions on the State and Local Fiscal Recovery Fund through the NACo COVID 19'Recovery Clearinghouse. See a selection of frequently asked questions below, and click here to ask your question. QUESTION ANSWER What resources are available for The U.S. Treasury Department's Proiect`and Expenditure Report counties that need help User Guide is a step-by-step guide to submitting completing the submitting the upcoming Project report. Additionally, Treasury has produced several webinars that and Expenditure Report? explain the relevant steps. NACo's Recovery Fund FAQs provide additional information on counties' most common reporting questions. QUESTION ANSWER" What is the difference between a Subrecipients receive recovery funds for the purpose of carrying subrecipient and a beneficiary of out eligible uses on behalf of a county. Counties are responsible recovery funds? ` for monitoring and reporting subrecipients' use of recovery funds. Beneficiaries receive recovery funds to help them mitigate an economic or public health impact of COVID-19 that they personally experienced. Beneficiaries are not subject to monitoring or reporting requirements. 660 North Capitol Street, NW, Suite 400 Washington, D.C. 20001 Did someone forward you this email? Sign up to stay up-to-date on topics affecting America's counties! Click here to unsubscribe. Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 4:02 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: News Release: Unprecedented blow down and lingering winter conditions limit access on Olympic National Forest From: Olympic National Forest Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 4:00:43 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: News Release: Unprecedented blow down and lingering winter conditions limit access on Olympic National Forest ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Olympic National Forest Forest Service News Release Corina Rend6n Qonna rendonrusa.aov • @olympicfores Unprecedented blow down and lingering winter conditions limit access on Olympic National Forest Olympia, WA, April 7, 2022— This winter the Olympic National Forest experienced multiple atmospheric river events that caused unprecedented damage across the forest. Staff and volunteers have been working aggressively to clear blow down to ensure visitors can safely access the forest but due to the high volume of downed trees and low snow levels some areas remain inaccessible. Visitors to the forest should be aware that general spring maintenance and operations of roads and recreation sites may be delayed while crews prioritize clearing blow down on high use roads. Areas where access is limited include: • Skokomish Drainage, FS-Road 23 network • Hamma Hamma Drainage, FS-Road 25 network • Donkey Creek Area, FS- Road 22 network When visiting any area of the forest this spring visitors should practice the following tips to ensure a safe trip. • While hiking, look up and look around. There may remaining trees or limbs that could still fall. • Some parking areas may be limited due to snow or debris; do not park where you may hinder traffic or where additional debris may fall. • Be prepared with a backup destination as access may be limited or your vehicle may not be able to make the trip, it is okay to turn around. • Be cautious when driving and watch for vehicles that maybe crossing lanes in efforts to avoid trees or brush in the roadway. • Pack all recreation safety essentials, dress appropriately, bring extra food, water, and clothing items. Winter conditions persist at higher elevations. Recreation sites and roads are opening as conditions allow and maintenance is completed including the removal of blow down. Visitors are encouraged to report significant road or trail damage by sending an email to the Olympic National Forest. For updates on recreation sites on the forest visit the forest's Recreatio Conditions Report or call a forest office. U,K)A is an equal opportunity provider, employer, and lender. Olympic National Forest 1 1835 Black Lk Blvd SW, Olympia, WA 98512 Unsubscribe heisenhour@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by corina.rendon@usda.gov powered by 00 Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 5:39 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Maritime High School - State Supplemental Budget Funding Secured! Thank You! From: Stephen Streufert Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2022 5:37:09 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Stephen Streufert Cc: Katelyn Kean Subject: Maritime High School - State Supplemental Budget Funding Secured! Thank You! ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Supporters of Maritime High School - Last week, Washington Governor Jay Inslee signed the state's supplemental budget. And with your tremendous support, $1 M was included for recruitment and start-up expenses to support the growth of Maritime High School. Thank You! Maritime High School teachers and students joined you in the effort to advocate for this funding, and I thought you'd be interested in reading a few lines from one of the founding teachers in her persuasive letter to our legislative leaders: I'm working my tail off trying to not just provide exceptional experiences to our current students, but to set the stage for our future. We are building traditions, experiences, and curricula for tomorrow. In a few short years, we anticipate meeting our ideal student body enrollment of 400. Last month my students explored the impact of microplastics in our waterways. They collected samples from waterways and nearshore environments. They designed, built, re -designed, and rebuilt underwater RO Vs (Remote Operating Vehicles) to collect microplastics. Further, they came to an understanding of how Washington State's legislative action could have a positive effect on our environment. When my students heard that the supplemental budget process could result in additional funding to support the growth of Maritime High School, several stepped up to write letters of support. I was moved by what I read in some of their letters. Here's a couple of my favorite lines from their letters: • Maritime High school makes me want to learn and do something important and impactful in the career I choose. I have had so many experiences at this school that you can't • get at other schools. It's a hands-on learning environment. I think this school is full of opportunities and is very rewarding. I think if you visited High School you would see our hard work paying off. • A school like this is the perfect environment for a student • like me to flourish and grow • There is • something special about this school, I just can't put my finger on it but whatever it is it makes this school incredibly effective at teaching, Indeed there is something very special about this school, and thank you for your part in helping to launch Maritime High School. Thank you! P.S. We continue to enroll students for next year. Information can be found HERE. 1111HIN 11'111UFIRT , helM, (wh pfqD2g..r.l.s.matter) Chief Development Officer Northwest Maritime Center, 431 Water Street, Port Townsend, WA 98308 Cell: 206.902.8555 Get to know us: BOAT, 2 AX , vt��P" t 48°N" 9 2 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Friday, April 8, 2022 10:03 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Friday 51 NCGM I COVID-19 1 Energy From: Washington Counties I WSAC Sent: Friday, April 8, 2022 9:59:56 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Friday 5 1 NCGM I COVID-19 I Energy ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. It's April, so that means counties around the country are celebrating National County Government Month (NCGM)! Here at WSAC, we want to celebrate you, our counties, and the wonderful work you all do around our beautiful state! As a part of this year's NCGM, we want to encourage you and your constituents to get out and WAnder! Explore new areas, learn new things, find great places with even greater people! Let's WAnder Counties! As you're out exploring our beautiful state, be sure to snap pictures, take video, and then share them on your social media accounts using #WAnderCounties and tag WSAC on our channels below! Learn More f facebook 2 (W-) twitter instagram linkedin Skagit County leadership needs to invest in equity as the county recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a report from local leaders in community health. The 2022 COVID Recovery Plan — adopted by the county late last month — is intended to help guide Skagit County commissioners as they direct $1 million in federal pandemic relief funding earmarked for community health. Members of the county's Population Health Trust spent the last year and a half collecting input from the public, and confirmed the experience of the pandemic has been divided along racial, economic and social lines. 3 � ���� �� ��,, ��,,�,,� 4 44% of the allocation to the ARPA Local Assistance and Tribal Consistency Fund that was created to address public lands revenue -sharing in FY 2022 and 2023. 9i WASHING TON STATE ASSOCtATION -ICOUNTIES ................................... Learn More GET IT ON YOUR CALENDAR Commerce is now accepting applications for two funding opportunities through the Energy Retrofits for Public Buildings program: • Energy Efficiency grants: $1.8 million is available for improvements to existing facilities and related projects that result in energy savings.and operational cost savings. Projects must use non -fossil fuel devices and systems whenever possible and cost-effective. • Solar Energy grants: $1.2 million is available for new solar photovoltaic systems up to 100 kW AC that are net -metered with existing publicly -owned buildings or facilities in Washington. Applications are due May 25. 5 Learn More FOLLOW US R= (4 twitter instagram ill finkedin wsac.org View this email in v-o-ur-browser This email was sent to heisenhou.L@c:o.jefferson.wa.us I Whv ci€d.f caet this? Want to change how you receive these emails? Updgj.g.,ygqr refere nces. I U --p _— - be. -from -this. list.. Copyright V 2022 Washington State Association of Counties, All rights reserved. 206 10th Ave SE - Olympia, WA 98501-1311 - USA I Contact Us 6 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Friday, April 8, 2022 10:30 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: WSF Update Attachments: 220408 - Media Advisory -Washington State Ferries and Seattle Maritime Academy to address worker shortage.docx; WSF Reopening Plan 3-22-22 v2.pdf From: Vezina, John Sent: Friday, April 8, 2022 10:27:55 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) Subject: WSF Update ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. County and City Elected Officials from WSF-served Communities, Good morning. While there continues to be a shortage of mariners internationally, WSF is looking at new ways to connect with prospective employees. To that end, as detailed in the media release attached, on Monday we're doing an event with Seattle Maritime Academy, touring the facility, and focusing on opportunities for engine room careers. We're looking at other opportunities like this as we work to recruit new employees — especially from non-traditional groups (women, BIPOC, and LGBT) so more to come on that front. And, marking another service restoration milestone, as explained in the second attachment, next week we'll begin restoring food service in vessel galleys. Beginning next Wednesday, April 13, WSF's food service vendor Sodexo Live! (formerly Centerplate) will reopen galleys on two vessels on Anacortes/San Juan Islands routes, one on Seattle/Bainbridge, one on Edmonds/Kingston, and one on Seattle/Bremerton. By using a phased approach, they'll prioritize reopening safely, following all safety requirements. Additional openings are reliant on Sodexo Live! being able to hire more staff and sales allowing for expansion. They have engaged with WSF and labor in recalling former employees back to work, with generous wage increases. They'll continue to offer a great selection of NW products (Ivar's, Alki Bakery, Cafe Vita, Schwartz Bros, Lopez Ice Cream, Uli's Sausages, CB's Nuts, and Ancient Grains). We're excited to mark this further step in returning to past customer service. Please let me know if you have any questions. Best, John John B. Vezina Government Relations Director Washington State Ferries Washington State Department of Transportation Ferris Division — 2901 Third Ave., Suite 500 — Seattle, WA 98121-3024 — 206-515-3400 MEDIA ADVISORY — Not for publication April 8, 2022 Contacts: Ian Sterling, communications, 206-714-1556 WSF media hotline, 206-402-8070 Washington State Ferries and Seattle Maritime Academy to address worker shortage SEATTLE — A worldwide shortage of mariners has forced Washington State Ferries to operate reduced sailing schedules on some routes. With engine room employees in high demand, WSF is redoubling efforts along with Seattle Central College's Seattle Maritime Academy to attract and train the next generation of merchant mariners. SMA offers a fast track for people interested in marine engineering technology and a career with WSF. Seattle Maritime Academy tour and mariner interview opportunities When: 10:30 a.m., April 11 Where: Seattle Maritime Academy, 4455 Shilshole Ave. NW, Seattle Speakers: Hana Stevanovic, WSF oiler and recent SMA graduate Jim Sturgul, WSF chief engineer and SMA graduate Dale Bateman, SMA associate dean Visuals: State -of the art engine room simulator, students in classrooms and in diesel engine lab located on the shores of Lake Union Important information: On -site parking available RSVP: Email Ian Sterling at steriangwsdot.wa.gov if you plan to attend. WSF, a division of the Washington State Department of Transportation, is the largest ferry system in the U.S. and safely and efficiently carries tens of millions of people a year through some of the most majestic scenery in the world. For breaking news and the latest information, follow WSF on Twitter and Facebook. Hyperlinks within the release: • Washington State Ferries: wsdot.wa.gov/travel/washingtton-state-ferries • Seattle Maritime Academy: maritime. seattlecentral.edu/ • Twitter: twitter.com/wsferries • Facebook: www.facebook.com/wsferries/ WSDOT keeps people, businesses and the economy moving by operating and improving the state's transportation systems. To learn more about what we're doing, go to www.wsdot.wa.gov/news for pictures, videos, news and blogs. Real time traffic information is available at wsdot.com/traffic or by dialing 511. To unsubscribe to WSDOT media releases please reply and type REMOVE in the subject line. U 4A dA lllf7 L Vf0 co C C a) Wa) C C 4 r C C C a) G. iii L O > 5 Q. 0 O c c Q M a, o a 0 W O 5 a) ;e m U Q- > O v C ' . ` N L�In atO L:3 -C a' a c � u O 'a .a ms " Z � M aJ - N N a) 4� 7 .Q E 'x } C O o t COL ,nCL >�j - O c J H N u.O i C Y O j Z C "a C41 a) N 4- OL U�0 .O O hLU O O O 3 w m 4�/1 c E O v c fY a) N , N O ra c Y y ++ 41 O aJ U' v i s I I o a M Q � a) p ctom m O c va) L O o J '1 m U aJ C N p a) >� C cn to w V) O z cn 4= t9 QO a 3 :3.0 �� u o� C4- a o M a) 0-0 O u d m u o Q d m r4 N M d' U1 l0 N # !�J bl All , ,� a3 '}I 4 I OF N t cn + 0 O M �a O _ L v 0 N O U -Q cn O L O — O 4- (10 U •� q� v C ii O N �► s CL O �v Ovv t13 ..Y a7 a) v Q L a] v a o �� ;C 0 co <t � L N o 3 � o N U L w O Q � O Q 7fQ c 0 C E -0 U_ O - Q O v s (o O O V) v 3 CY) c a O U O �_ '~w L vo V O. c � v Q V '� g- O Q m E +- v� �c: W 4 1 i 1 z, V d} 41 �i V b A ; ` t4 �E W U Oo (1i ELr) Q M 0 E u _ _ 0 0 a� o 4-1 o (o c, U) E L O N s N O O Qi E N `} -C V 06 O cn 0 0 CIO U a 0 N E U 0 Q v Q U (n >, O 0 O i � O �, O z +j U :3 U) } ) UO E L N =_ cn � - U � H U) 2O ��\\ J 0 NLi 0 s dS 4-1 %1 N L N 0 +, (T p � - � W r- c-� (y) 4 Ln -o r 00 01 L —0 O O O N � O � 0-0 4� C t O : m 0-E N mZ O s 0 u L O C N m — O a; L to • ca U ca N O U) pcant c C) -a O U U �, _O Ln to � � � -� � � s •>, U O s co' >, O N � C U rn u' �-0 0- E (10 _O U. C N a� O /U^, 06 —= co U co N C M O N a) O t 0 C 0 0- = ca 3 C >N �4' L E >U)^^0 U)S.L O° >O 66 c N '(6 Q O a..+ J i U Y tE Q m o z L Q m N � N m to L U fB V1 3 a, o U On M L (n :3 f0 f0 O o > V) cnL � a� Lcu Y U CO a) U Q � Vf -0 W- mi Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Friday, April 8, 2022 10:47 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Ask MRSC: April 2022 From: Ask MRSC Sent: Friday, April 8, 2022 10:45:21 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Ask MRSC: April 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. 1 j Are there state laws prohibiting members of one family holding the majority of elected positions in a small town council (3 of 5 positions)? No, although it would be unusual even in a small town, there is no state law prohibiting otherwise j qualified members from the same family from holding a majority (or more) of the elected positions on a town or city council. As indicated on MRSC's topic page on Nepotism: l l 1 • For the most part, state law does not address nepotism, except to the extent that three labor - related statutes prohibit discrimination based upon marital status. See RCW 49.60.180, 1 49.60.190, and 49.60.200. The state law Code of Ethics for Municipal Officers, chapter 42.23 RCW does not prohibit spouses or other family members from serving in elected offices. Here is an excerpt from MRSC's 2021 blog post Bringing the Family to Work: E • When one municipal officer's spouse is appointed or elected as another municipal officer, the j prohibitions at RCW 42.23.030 are not implicated because that is not an employment contract. As explained in AGO 1996 No. 15: "[F]or purposes of RCW 42.23.030, there is a legally significant difference between a contract of employment and the holding a public office. Although an employee's right to compensation may arise by virtue of a contract, a public officer's right to compensation does not depend upon contract. Instead, it belongs to the officer as an incident of office." Are there special procedures to dispose of a city's surplus firearms? Firearms purchased and used by a city police department may be disposed of in the usual way a city surpluses other city property it no longer needs, with some caveats noted below. One option would be to sell the firearms by auction or trade to licensed dealers. We recommend looking to see if the city has adopted procedures for surplussing city property (either in its code or policies). If it has, then those procedures should be followed. And here is a link to the MRSC webpage on the Sale of Surplus City or Town Property that includes practice tips and sample procedures. Please be aware that some firearms that may be lawful for law enforcement officers to possess, may I otherwise be illegal. See RCW 9.41.190. In that case, an option might be to sell them to another police agency or perhaps to disassemble the weapons and sell for parts. i 2 �- Finally, firearms that are seized and forfeited are treated differently under RCVVQ41.U08(see in particular subsection (2)(a)) and RCW Ch. 63.32 (unclaimed). If you are dealing with forfeited or seized firearms, these provisions should be reviewed carefully. What iwthe city's obligation to retain vmioemoikm? , If you do not convert the voicemail to transcription, the retention period will depend on the content of the call. |fyou duconvert, then wnthink the retention schedule inCORE DAN8S201O-UO8(page 1O2) would apply. Once the agency has confirmed transcription, it may destroy the recording. The agency will want to be sure it has captured all the relevant data — to and from numbers, time, length, etc. The state archivist has the following guidance on voicemails: Managing Voicemails - Washington State � Amhivoa-VVASenn»tarynfStato � VVehave local ribbon cuttings where city council is invited. May a quorum or more of the council attend without this becoming omeeting subject tothe OPMA? A quorum or more of the council can attend a ribbon cutting ceremony without implicating the OPMA, provided no city business is transacted. See RCW 42.30.070 and this FAQ on our website: Are social gatherings orother organizations' meetings subject tothe OPMA? Two things toconsider for social functions: a)If the invite issent hoall council members etthe city you may want hoconsider posting anotice somewhere that council has been invited, amajority/quorum nfthe council may attend, and that they will not be conducting city business at the event; b) Your city attorney may want toconduct some refresher training unthe OPK8A. We suggest that if a majority does attend a social event, they should take care to not all sit together (or in uquomm'oizedQmup)undtho|thoymakeaumtokoop(heevent000ia|.ondnotdioouoyoitybuuinean � omongthemmo|xeowhile atthe event. � Do you have examples of local policies for use of city/community reader boards? -' Many local governments allow use of their facilities on a nondiscriminatory, equal access basis to the public, usually for a rental fee and this could include a message on a reader board. Some cities have -policies that address how city reader board signs may be used. Here are a few examples: Marysville Community Information Reader Board Application — Includes rules and policies Des Moines Executive Order +~/wxnvuuv/ovuwrm*/um Policies and eligibility Centralia Electronic Hub City Sign — Policy and sign application form ~ We recommend working closely with your city attorney in developing such a policy, keeping in mind First Amendment issues. A city reader board should not be used to advertise a political event, especially if the event relates to a political candidate or ballot measure. ' ` � � , RCW4217A.555prohibits the use of city facilitiesus on social media. to support or oppose political campaigns. Thank you to our generous sponsors Stay Informed MRSC publishes a number of e-newsletters related to local government issues.. You can also keep up with � � 3 MALIKUINA LANtPUWtLL ( LAW t;KOUP, PLLC i Q CAiRNCROSS&HEMPELMANN f THE CH& ATTORNEYS AT LAW Athena THE I,AW OFFICE- OF GROUP I{IM LHUGNES 11 I i If you have questions or comments for the newsletter editor, please MRSC.Or contact Jill Dvorkin, Legal Consultant. g MRSC f 2601 Fourth Avenue, Suite 800, Seattle, WA 98121 Unsubscribe heisenhour0co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by it@mrsc.org 4 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Friday, April 8, 2022 12:51 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: New Jefferson County road serving Port Ludlow Olympic Terrace 2 Phase 2 [37 homes] From: bertl@cablespeed.com Sent: Friday, April 8, 2022 12:49:53 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Cc: Brent Butler; Jodi Adams; Debra Murdock; David W. Johnson; Mark McCauley; Heidi Eisenhour; Kate Dean Subject: New Jefferson County road serving Port Ludlow Olympic Terrace 2 Phase 2 [37 homes] ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Greg, Sorry you could not make yesterday's PLVC meeting. PLA raised the issue that the County is refusing to approve a County road to service that new 37 home subdivision [Olympic Terrace 2 Phase 2]. If this information correct, please let me know the policy and/or legal basis for the County's refusal. I'm curious, the 37 lot subdivision should generate between $185,000 - $250,000 in annual property tax revenue for the County. I look forward to your explanation. Regards, Bert 1 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Friday, April 8, 2022 1:01 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: County Virtual Assembly I April 11 From: Washington State Association of Counties Sent: Friday, April 8, 2022 12:59:20 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: County Virtual Assembly I April 11 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. The Washington State Broadband Office Join WSAC in meeting the newly appointed Director of the Washington State Broadband Office within the Department of Commerce, Mark Vasconi. Mr. Vasconi most recently served as Director of Regulatory Services at the Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission and has extensive experience in the telecommunications industry. Help WSAC welcome Mr. Vasconi to his new role, hear his vision for shaping the SBO and broadband access across the state, and share your perspectives on what he should 1 consider. Mark Barkley, Assistant Director for the Local Government Division within Commerce, will join him. ;;view Assemblies,• rr Register in advance for these meetings After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting. z jeffbocc From: Recovery Cafe Jefferson County <developmentrc@dovehousejc.org> Sent: Friday, April 8, 2022 9:06 AM To: jeffbocc Subject: Join us at Recovery Cafe this month ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. View this email in your browser �1 jL aaveocrvicocres Reoovery C�efA ' V .1..� S HOUSE Recovery Cafe Jefferson County 939 Kearney St, Port Townsend, WA 98368 RecoverycateJc.org 360-385.5292 Join us a Recovery Cafe We're excited to share that, beginning May 4th, 2022, Recovery Cafe will be serving free lunch on Wednesdays at 12:30pm! Thank you to our awesome Staff, Members, and Volunteers for making our third weekly meal possible! *Masks currently required for indoor dining. Outdoor dining also available.* We will no longer require masks when the COVID-19 transmission rate for Jefferson County, WA drops below 100 cases per 100, 000 people. Updates every Tuesday and Friday found here. Summer Open Mic Nights on the patio 939 Keorney Street CeccoveryCafe port Townsend. WA 98368 co„ 360-385-5292 de4opmentrc ovehousejc.org April 2022 Events Calendar APRIL 2022 RECOVERY CAFE EVENTS CALENDAR SUN MON TUES WED THURS FRI SAT 3 4 5 --- 6 7 8 9 Yoga for Members New Member Intro 9-10am _tawopon 10am-1pm (register at desk) Volunteer Orient 11-12 Cafd Open 12.4pm -Brunch served 10:30 10-1 130am -Lunch served 12:30 Caf6 Open 12-4prn "Rod Cry" Art Group 1;30pm Documentary Soul's Journey class 4-5 Screening 130-4pm NAMI Support Group 7-830 10 111 12 13 14 15 16 Yoga for Members New Member Intro 9-1 Oam Caf6 Open I 0am-I pm (register at desk) Volunteer Orient 11 -12 Caft Open 12-4pm -Brunch served 10:30 10-1 130am -Lunch served 12:30 Cafd Open 12.4prn "Suicide Prevention intervention" byNAMI Soups Journey class 4-5 130-3pm 17 is 19 20 21 22 23 New Member Intro 9-10arn Volunteer Orient 11-12 Caf6 Open 12.4pm C*f6 Open 10am-ipm Dove House Yoga for Members -Lunch served 12:30 -Brunch served 10:30 "Consent (register at desk) Caft Open 12.4pm Too" 3-7p 10-1 130arn Sours Journey class 4-5 JC MASH Clinic NAMI Support Group 7-B30 130.3pm 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Yoga for Members New Member Intro 9-1 Oam Caf4 Open 12-4pm Caft Open I 0am-I pm (register at desk) Volunteer Orient 11-12 -Lunch served 12:30 -Brunch served 10:30 10-1 130arn Caft Open 12-4pm "Am I the victim of a crime?" 13pm 0 we, IN 12181 1819A O Copyright (C) 2022 Dove House Advocacy Services. All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website. Our mailing address is: Dove House Advocacy Services 1045 10th St Port Townsend, WA 98368-2933 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe Grow your business with Cmanchimp jeffbocc From: Lynn Sorensen <passages2007@yahoo.com> Sent: Friday, April 8, 2022 12:39 PM To: Allison Berry; Berry, Allison; Willie Bence; Greg Brotherton; Kate Dean; Heidi Eisenhour; jeffbocc; KPTZ VTeam Subject: KPTZ listener questions for Monday April 11, 2022 BOCC Update ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. County Commissioners, Dr Allison Berry, and Willie Bence, The KPTZ listener questions were rather sparse last week and are numbered 1 through 3. Please see the additional questions from the past week also listed for Monday April 11, 2022 BOCC Update. Thank you, Lynn Sorensen KPTZ Virus Watch Team Questions for Dr Allison Berry: 1. Through the end of March, people could go to the Say Yes Covid Tests website and get free covid tests mailed to them. This was very useful for people who need to test periodically for admission to events. Will there be a similar offering for April? 2. What is the process for people to get the second boosters? Should we make appointments at the local pharmacies or at the hospital? 3. What are the case rates along the I-5 corridor? In particular; King, Snohomish, and Pierce Counties? Is Eastern Washington continuing to have higher case rates, in general, than Western Washington? 4. I am wondering if this is a "safe" time to go dancing, (actual partner dancing); or to go to a dance or musical concert events (indoors, probably don't require proof of vaccination; people may not be vaccinated/boosted). I am fully vaccinated and boosted x1. Last booster in November 2021. 5. Can taking NSAIDs to minimize vaccination discomfort increase the possibility of the rare dangerous blood clots sometimes associated with the vaccine? https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7320673/ 6. 1 received my first booster shot at the OMC Front Street Clinic in Port Angeles a few weeks ago. OMC Front Street clinic offers boosters without an appointment. I'd like to recommend it to a few of my older Canadian friends seeking second booster shots. Second boosters are available to those over 50 in the US and to those over 70 in BC. Is there any reason why our Canadian friends over 50 who happen to be day -tripping in Port Angeles shouldn't get their second boosters at the walk-in clinic on Front Street before catching the afternoon ferry home? 7. Are there any new variants and how they are affecting our case rates? (Do they make us "less safe" than before they showed up?) Also, is it advisable for me to get the second booster? I am almost 70, in fairly good health currently, but some vulnerabilities in nervous system, digestion, kidneys and bone health. 8. We have each had 2 Pfizer vaccine shots and 1 Pfizer booster. We are 75 and 80, so hope to be eligible for the second covid booster shots. Should we try for a Moderna second booster, instead of Pfizer? 9. 1 received notice on Sunday, April 3rd, that someone I was near to on Saturday, April 2nd, had tested positive for Covid. When should I test myself and how long should I isolate now that a new variant is likely? 10. Recently I read that the effectiveness of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine over time has proven to be as effective as the mRNA vaccines. Would it be a better strategy, and is it possible, to get a J & J booster rather than a fourth dose of Moderna? 11. Are vaccinated adults with no underlying conditions still dying of Covid? Friends in other areas are jealous of our community's ability to receive up-to-date information and also the ability to ask questions. Thank you for all you do! 12.1 am 65 year old male with underlying conditions and have been vaccinated and boosted, most recently —6 months ago. I am considering a second booster. Would you recommend a second booster, and if so, when is the best time to get one that offers the best coverage over the coming months? Would it make sense to wait until the Fall when either a wide spectrum (all variants) or a targeted (variant specific) vaccine may become available? Are there any concerns about getting so many Covid boosters/vaccinations in such a short period of time? Julie Shannon From• Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Saturday, April 9, 2022 5:08 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject• FW: This Week in Photos From: NACo Sent: Saturday, April 9, 2022 5:06:15 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: This Week in Photos ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Wake County @WakeGOV Having trouble viewing this email? Click Here NACo @NACoTweets I NACo @NACoTweets County leaders participate in NACo's Healthy Counties Forum. Wake County, N.C. Chair Sig Hutchinson welcomes attendees to the county; NACo 1st VP Denise Winfrey highlights the vital county role in public health; and NACo 2nd VP Mary Jo McGuire leads a discussion on investing American Rescue Plan resources in the future of our communities' health. Fulton County, OH @FultonCounty_OH County Commissioners Association of Ohio Executive Director Cheryl Subler and Fulton County, Ohio Commissioner Jon Rupp celebrate National County Government Month. Hilda Solis @HildaSolis Los Angeles County, Calif. Supervisor Hilda Solis (center) and county public health officials launch a project to improve health outcomes for infants and children. L.Johnson @Reach4Wellness NACo President Larry Johnson (center) leads a community clean up event. Find resources to encourage volunteerism during National County Government Month. St. Bernard Parish @StBGov Presidents of Louisiana's coastal parishes discuss policy priorities with Governor John Bel Edwards (center). 'Guilford County @Guilford County Wminnesota Counties @MNcounties North Carolina Association of County Commissioners (NCACC) President Frank Williams, Guilford County Emergency Management Director Steven Grose, Guilford County Commissioner Kay Cashion and Brunswick County Commissioner Randy Thompson lead an emergency preparedness task force meeting. Mark Poloncarz @MarkPoloncarz Erie County, N.Y. Executive Mark Poloncarz leads the county's first in -person commissioner and department heads meeting since the pandemic began. The Association of Minnesota Counties (AMC) presents Carlton County with a 2021 AMC Achievement Award. There is still time to apply for a 2022 NACo Achievement Award. The application deadline is Friday, April 15. Click here to learn more and apply today. Sedgwick County @Sedgwick County Sedgwick County, Kan. Commissioners Sarah Lopez, David Dennis and Pete Meitzner welcome the creation of new jobs in the county. 3 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OfCOUNTIES 660 North Capitol Street, NW, Suite 400 Washington, D.C. 20001 0 Did someone forward you this email? Sign up to stay up-to-date on topics affecting America's counties! Click here to unsubscribe. Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Sunday, April 10, 2022 3:03 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Washington State Department of Commerce Weekly Digest Bulletin From: Washington State Department of Commerce Sent: Sunday, April 10, 2022 3:00:54 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Washington State Department of Commerce Weekly Digest Bulletin ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Special Legislative Update: Planners' Newsletter Having trouble viewing this email? View it online Legislative Update Special edition: End of legislative session wrap-up. Gov. Jay Inslee finished signing the budget and bills listed below on March 31. Many of these bills will take effect in the new fiscal year. We'll work with counties, cities and staff across the state as these changes become law and new funds are available for this critical work. The Washington State Legislature made a series of historic investments in our communities this year. A $10 million investment in funding for Growth Management Act (GMA) periodic updates, including the implementation of H 1220 (2021), will be distributed annually throughout the full periodic update cycle. The Legislature also invested $7.5 million for cities in the Puget Sound region to expand housing choices and allow middle housing types in their development regulations. We are working out the final details of these grant packages, including grant amounts, and will provide details on contract procedures later this spring. Eligible counties and cities may start incurring costs under the grants beginning July 1, 2022. Periodic update timelines: HB 141 HB 1241 changes the comprehensive plan periodic update cycle from an eight - year cycle to a 10-year cycle. For jurisdictions with a due date in 2024, it changes the due date from June 30 to Dec. 30, 2024. It also requires larger counties and cities with a population over 6,000 to prepare an implementation progress report due five years after the periodic update. Counties required to produce an implementation progress report include King, Pierce, Snohomish, Kitsap, Whatcom, Thurston, Clark, Benton, Franklin and Spokane. The first implementation progress reports are due in 2029. Commerce is responsible for developing guidance and indicators to assist cities and counties with the implementation progress reports. TribaN a ici ation Nn G tannin : 1i17 This bill creates a framework for tribal participation in the growth management planning process. Tribes and local governments enter into a memorandum of agreement for collaboration and participation in the county or regional planning process. The bill also creates a role for Commerce to facilitate the resolution of any disputes between Tribes and local governments over planning issues. Upon request, Commerce will provide a Tribe with notices of proposed comprehensive plans or amendments to comprehensive plans provided by a city or county to Commerce. Urban growth areas: SB 5593 This bill provides a framework for counties to adjust an urban growth area (UGA) boundary. By removing an area from the UGA, a county may add a new area of the same size without needing a land capacity analysis. To make such an adjustment, the following criteria must be met: • There can be no change in the overall size of the UGA. • The areas added cannot be designated or formerly designated as resource lands. • The area added may not include more than 15% critical areas. • The area added must be suitable for urban growth. • The new area must show adequate public facilities for capital facilities and transportation elements are provided. • The UGA may not be larger than needed to accommodate needed growth over the 20-year planning period. • The area removed must not contain urban densities. • The area added must be contiguous to the existing UGA. This bill limits the effective date of certain comprehensive plan amendments. If a county expands the urban growth boundary, changes resource lands designations or expands the outer boundary of a limited area of more intense rural development, the effective date of the change must occur no sooner than 60 days after the date of publication. If the action is appealed, the effective date may not occur before the Growth Management Hearings Board issues its final decision. Enacin o ortunit in limited areas of more intense rural Bevel® ent: SIB 575 This bill allows more flexibility and options for redevelopment inside the logical outer boundary of a limited area of more intense rural development. It allows areas greater flexibility to evolve over time while maintaining essentially the same footprint of the original development. New uses are allowed if existing public facilities have sufficient capacity. The bill contains some limits on the size of new retail and food service uses. SEEA±xemption expansion: SB 5518 This bill makes several key changes to SEPA: Amends (RCW 36.70A.6001 to encourage cities to take specific actions expanding housing supply. Previously, city adoption of these measures were precluded from appeal under SEPA, provided the city took action by April 2023. This bill makes this "safe harbor" incentive permanent by removing the sunset date. Amends the GMA housing element (RCW 36.70A.070) and SEPA (RCW 43.21 C.495) to preclude SEPA appeals on the adoption of development regulations and other non -project actions that increase housing capacity, increase housing affordability and mitigate displacement. • Amends SEPA (RCW 43.21 C.501) to preclude appeals of residential development projects based on either aesthetics or light and glare, if the project is subject to design review. "Design review" is a formally adopted process by which cities review projects for compliance with design standards. • Requires Ecology to update SEPA categorical exemption rules to increase the upper limits of optional flexible thresholds for housing developments, including increasing the upper limit for multifamily homes from 60 units to 200 units. Ecology is directed to add a procedural requirement to ensure impacts to the environment and the state transportation network are addressed when exemption thresholds are raised. • Creates a new section in SEPA to clarify that an applicant whose project qualifies as categorically exempt does not need to file a SEPA checklist if other information is available to establish that a project qualifies for an exemption. SEPA updates from Ecology The safe harbor provisions that preclude DEPARTMENT OF SEPA appeals of various actions apply on the effective date of the bill. There is no associated rule making. As directed State of Washington by the bill, Ecology will update SEPA rules for categorical exemptions at WAC 197-11-800 by Dec. 31, 2022, using expedited rule making. Ecology will also remove parking from the SEPA checklist as directed by the 2020 Legislature in ESHB 2343. For more information, contact Ecology's Fran Sant at fran.sant@,ecy.wa.gov or 360-529-6375. What bills and concepts 't make 1t Climate change The Legislature continued efforts to include climate change requirements in the Growth Management Act in HB 1099. Despite broad support, a last-minute detour into conference committee slowed the bill down and the legislative session clock ran out before a final House vote. This delay proved fatal to the bill when debates over the transportation budget took up valuable hours in the final days of session. Housing Housing affordability and housing production were major topics again this year. Gov. Inslee included a middle housing bill (HB 1782) as part of his legislative agenda. A broad coalition championed this bill, including the building industry, housing advocates and environmentalists. Despite the efforts of this diverse coalition, middle housing legislation didn't pass this session. Permit timelines A number of bills were to change the Local Project Review Act. Proposals included expanded reporting of permit timeline performance, further limitations on the ability to request new information, a reduction in permit timelines for interior improvements, studies of permit timeline performance, and an incentive package to expand the use of permit tracking software. Salmon Several bills attempted to stop the continued decline of Washington salmon runs and improve the quality of salmon habitat. HS 1117 returned from last year with support from local governments, but failed to pass. Gov. Inslee championed another salmon recovery bill, named the Loraine Loomis Act, in honor of one of Washington's most ardent champions of Tribal treaty rights and salmon. This bill faced stiff opposition and didn't pass. Although the bills mentioned above did not pass, the budget includes increased funding for existing salmon habitat programs and funding for efforts to improve implementation of existing habitat protection authority. The Governor's Office will convene a broad group of stakeholders to attempt to reach agreement on a salmon recovery bill with enough support to pass the Legislature and successfully recover healthy salmon runs. Collaborative Roadmap The Collaborative Roadmap F Phase 111 project, which is • , a„ studying and recommending reforms to the statutes that make up Washington's growth policy framework, has an exciting 2022 in store. The Phase III Task Force met .nR three times in 2021 and '~ mm considered five different issues, eventually making . formal recommendations on four of them. The Legislature reintroduced and considered several growth policy -related bills from the 2021 session that didn't pass, some of which implemented recommendations or considerations of the Task Force. In the coming weeks, the Collaborative Roadmap team will begin engaging Tribes, cities, counties, special districts, businesses and industries, state agencies, and traditionally underrepresented voices in decision making to manage growth across Washington. The Task Force will examine major issues, including annexation incentives, right -sizing GMA requirements, missing middle housing, and integrating growth planning across cities, counties, and other local and regional service providers. The Task Force will meet up to 10 times between May and November 2022 to study and make recommendations with input from various working groups and organizations. For more information, visit the Department of Commerce's Growth Management website. Do you have new staff or know of someone who would like to learn more about planning news in Washington? Please share these easy steps to subscribe to Commerce's Growth Management mailing list and receive our monthly Planners' Update newsletter: 1. Visit .commerce.wa.gov. 2. Scroll all the way down to the "Subscribe" section in the page footer. 3. Enter your email and select "submit" to choose subscriptions you would like to receive. (You can unsubscribe from any list at any time.) 4. Under the "Public Infrastructure" category, select "Growth Management" to receive this newsletter and other GMS updates. Commerce works with local governments, businesses, community -based organizations and tribes to strengthen communities. The department's diverse portfolio of more than 100 programs and effective public and private partnerships promote sustainable community and economic development to help all Washingtonians thrive. For more information, visit http//www.commerce.wa.q_ov. For information on locating or expanding a business in Washington, visit choosewastiin tack nstate.com. Update your subscriptions, modify your password or email address, or stop subscriptions at any time on your Subscriber Preferences Page. You will need to use your email address to log in. If you have questions or problems with the subscription service, please visit subscriberhelp.govdeiivery.com. This service is provided to you at no charge by Washington Department of Commerce Subscribe I Manage Preferences I Unsubscribe All I Help I Contact us Grant applications open: Youth Recreational Facilities 04/04/2022 Having trouble viewing this email? View it online Apply now for Youth Recreational Facilities • r grants • • round closes May 26 Commerce has opened a biennial reimbursement -style funding round for Youth Recreational Facilities. These grants fund 25% of eligible capital costs up to $1.2 million for non-residential facilities that provide youth (K-12) with recreation opportunities integrated with social and/or educational services. Ranking criteria for applications include: • the ability to complete the project expediently • the organizational capacity to run the facility effectively • community need • availability of other funding sources III, III III IS IIIII lIiIllI 11 The ZoomGrants application and supporting materials are available on the program webpage. • Applications due: 5 p.m. Thursday, May 26 virtual workshop: April 2 Join Commerce staff for a free application workshop on Zoom_ to answer any questions. The workshop is not mandatory. If you are unable to attend, please contact Commerce directly with questions. • 9-11 a.m. Thursday, April 28 Register • For existing ZoomGrants accounts, log in and follow the instructions. • New users should complete the required information for a new account to create a profile. • Please do not use "The" as the first word in the agency name. • Once an agency profile is created, select the YRF Grant and the "Apply" button to start your proposal. • Answers are automatically saved after each response. • Hardcopies of applications will not be accepted. k�uestions? Email cappprograms commerce.wa cov or call 360-725-3075. 8 Commerce works with local governments, businesses, community -based organizations and tribes to strengthen communities. The department's diverse portfolio of more than 100 programs and effective public and private partnerships promote sustainable community and economic development to help all Washingtonians thrive. For more information, visit http://www.commerce.wa.gov. For information on locating or expanding a business in Washington, visit choosewashingtonstate.com. Update your subscriptions, modify your password or email address, or stop subscriptions at any time on your Subscriber Preferences Page. You will need to use your email address to log in. If you have questions or problems with the subscription service, please visit subscriberhelp.govdelivery.com. This service is provided to you at no charge by Washington Department of Commerce. Subscribe I Manage Preferences I Unsubscribe All I Help I Contact us Request for proposals: Statewide Office for Behavioral Health Advocacy program 04/04/2022 Having trouble viewing this email? View it online Request for Proposals .. +r a nonprofitorganization t! lead « ! behavioral health consumer advocacy program Commerce has opened a Request for Proposal (RFP) to solicit proposals from a private nonprofit organization interested in managing a program to provide behavioral health consumer advocacy and ombuds services statewide. The organization would provide all program and staff support necessary to effectively protect the interests of residents, patients and clients of behavioral health providers or facilities. Download the RFP RFP Deadline: Monday, May 2, 2022 Contact RFP Coordinator Tammi Alexander at Commerce works with local governments, businesses, community -based organizations ondhibeoto strengthen communities. The department's diverse portfolio of more than 100 programs and effective public and private partnerships promote sustainable community and economic development to help all Washingtonians thrive. For more information, vioi ri�bnnedinn nnlocating orexpanding obusiness inWashington, visit choosewashingtonstate.com. Update your subscriptions, modify your password or email address, or stop subscriptions at any time on your Subscriber Preferences Page.You will need Vuuse your email address tolog in. |fyou have questions orproblems with the subscription service, please visit . This service isprovided hoyou sdnncharge by Washington Department of Commerce. Subscribe I Manage Preferences I Unsubscribe All I Help I Contact us ����������'� ������ ������� ��������U�'�^��� r�� Governor's ~-'''~-'~ ~~'~''—''~-'—~^`~`~^ ~~~~~'~~`~ nomin�K���'�������� ������� ����� ����U��� ������ �� ations ,~�~.~.. ..~' ....,~,~��.. .~.~~� ~'04/05/2022 Having trouble viewing this email? View it online 10 Governor'S2022Smart • Awards nominations open now through May 6 Rnnual awards recognize outstanding work in community planning and development Olympia, WA -- The Washington State Department of Commerce today called for nominations for the 16th annual Governor's Smart Communities Awards, a program that recognizes outstanding work by local governments and their partners on long-term community planning and development. through their plans and actions shaping how they want to look and function 20 or even 50 years from now. For one community, it may be an emphasis on supporting cultural and natural attractions, another may prioritize downtown redevelopment, and all require a shared •.: tough decisions and partnerships. "Too often we hear about the controversies and debates involved in land -use planning and growth management," said Commerce director Lisa Brown. "The Smart Communities Awards showcase collaboration and hard work by diverse community members and leaders to envision and put plans into action that create and sustain the vibrant neighborhood and places that make Washington state such a •: • to live, work and • Last year, • winners accomplished a variety of goals in a diverse exposition of local planning, community engagement and project due diligence. Two • these communes won the 2020-21 • Project" award. Starting in 2016, Lake Stevens implemented a long-term subarea plan, helping guide a community vision ♦ reality. I "We had the vision to build a town center, and fortunately for us, we already knew where the town center was going to be," Former Mayor john Spencer said. "We had our consultant give us a basic plan, but the big question was what we should do now. I think the answer to that lies in a very simple phrase: Just get started." Watch a video about 2020-21 award -winner Lake Stevens 11 for how the town should evolve while maintaining its charm and sense of community. "People engage with each other, they care about their community," North Bend Mayor Rob McFarland said. "It's absolutely looking down the road," he said of the project. "It's looking for a way to accommodate the changes that we know are coming and to find a way to allow for a vast variety • uses and changes." • in smart housing strategies: 2020-21 award winner • S'Klallam Tribe The Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe Housing Solutions Study, last year's winner •f the Smart Housing Strategies Award, conducted extensive community -W,-- uWU-UUrrtVYiUrMry7AXWa ry. " for the development of a m u Itigene rational community. The Tribe pulled together developers with different concepts, including cottage, modular, and cargo container housing to discuss product suitability, quality, and cost as a way to meet community needs. The judges noted that this housing marketplace was an innovative idea for other jurisdictions to consider. This housing study has already led to four strategic actions identified for immediate initiation by the Tribe, opening r J Learn more about these and all of the other 2020-21 award winners, and keep an eye • this Smart Communitig§_pla ylist for • •`•, coming •AI The 2022 awards added one new category to recognize successful places with a planning legacy award. Nominations are sought across these seven categories: 1 . Smart Vision Award for a comprehensive plan, subarea plan or countywide planning policies. Recognizing the successful achievement of a county, city, or town plan or policy for forming its local community vision, through an amendment to the comprehensive plan, subarea plan, or countywide planning policies, including robust community engagement and outreach. Ot. Smart Projects Award for project implementing a comprehensive plan. Recognizing the successful achievement of a governmental project with implementing a local county, city, or town's comprehensive plan. These may include, but are not limited to, adoption of implementing development regulations, infrastructure projects, community facilities, community -driven art installations, design implements, or parks. 3. Smart Partnership Award for a joint public project that implements a comprehensive plan. Successful applicants will demonstrate the joint implementation of a local county, city or town's comprehensive plan. These 12 may include, but are not limited to, regional open space network plans, govern ment-to-government long-term planning strategies, region-benefittinw infrastructure projects, public/private partnerships. 4. Smart Housing Strategies Award for creative plans, policies, programs and/or actions. Successful applicants will demonstrate innovation and creative strategies to address housing affordability through plans, policies, programs, development regulations and/or actions. For example, subarea plans that increase housing capacity, new housing element, policies with particular attention towards affordability, equity and displacement. 5. Smart Equity Strategies Award for plans, policies, programs and/or actions addressing impacts to community equity. Successful applicants will demonstrate the use of planning techniques to address impacts of equity and the protection of vulnerable people, places and systems. For example, plans or policies that directly address mitigation of impacts, such as displacement or gentrification by demonstrating how equity was achieved, such as the ending of negative effects and reversing redlining, unequitable exposure to toxins, poor air quality or extreme heat, urban renewal, gerrymandering & exclusionary zoning, or other inequitable land -use policies. 6. Smart Climate Change Strategies Award for plans, policies, programs and/or actions addressing community climate impacts. Successful applicants will demonstrate innovation and creative strategies to address local -issues driven by a rapidly changing climate, i.e. a community with extreme temperature events, flooding, fire hazards. Recognizing that different areas of the state will employ different tools and strategies, i.e. the prevention of wildfires in a region east of the cascades, and a fast-growing coastal city where flooding and storm effects are the most prominent threat. Planning Legacy Award for successful places Recognizing a place that is the result of implementing a plan over the last 25 or more years. This award recognizes the successful achievement of a county, city, town, or Tribe in implementing its long-term community vision, through plans, development regulations, or local actions and the significant planning efforts it takes to bring it into reality. We would ask applicants to find the original plan and demonstrate how the planning process established a vision and how that vision created a place of enduring value. Smart Communities Award nominations are open through May 6, 2022. Visit our webpaqe for more information and nomination forms. Media Contact 13 Penny Thomas Commerce works with local governments, businesses, organizations and tribes 0o strengthen communities. The department's diverse portfolio of more than 100 programs and effective public and private partnerships promote sustainable community and economic development to help all Washingtonians thrive. For more information, visit For information onlocating mrexpanding abusiness inWashington, visit choosewashingtonstate.com. Update your subscriptions, modify your password or email address, or stop subscriptions at any time on your You will need 8zuse your email address holog in. |fyou have questions orproblems with the subscription service, please visit subscriberhelp.govdeliveMcotp. This service isprovided huyou atnocharge by WashingtpD_De arlment of Commerce Subscribe I Manage Preferences I Unsubscribe All I Help I Contact us Stay connected with Commerce About Commerce Commerce works with local governments, businesses, community -based organizations and tribes to strengthen communities. The department's diverse portfolio of more than 100 programs and effective public and private partnerships promote sustainable community and economic development to help all Washingtonians thrive. For more information, visit 14 http://www.commerce.wa.gov. For information on locating or expanding a business in Washington, visit choosewashingtonstate.com. Update your subscriptions, modify your password or email address, or stop subscriptions at any time on your Subscriber Preferences Page. You will need to use your email address to log in. If you have questions or problems with the subscription service, please visit subscriberhelp.govdelivery.com. This service is provided to you at no charge by Washington Department of Commerce. SUBSCRIBER SERVICES: Subscribe I Manage Preferences I Unsubscribe All I Help This email was sent to heisenhour@co.jefferson.wa.us using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: Washington State Department of - " Commerce - 1011 Plum Street SE, P.O. Box 42525 • Olympia, WA 98504_ 2525 gOVOEttV'ERY10 15 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Sunday, April 10, 2022 7:16 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Summer programs for all ages! From: Northwest Maritime Center Sent: Sunday, April 10, 2022 7:14:39 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Summer programs for all ages! ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. View this email in your browser 1 FEATURED SUMMER CLASSES Boatshop Class Strip Planked Boat Construction: Building the Maiden of the Mast July 26- 7 19 AM-5 P Utilize the beautiful, 120-year-old western red cedar that served as the main mast for the Schooner Martha to build a Sid Skiff using strip plank construction. EGiTm' Youth Sailing Class Learn to Sail Full Day Classes (Intermediate & Advanced) Intermediate: Aug 1-5 19 -4 PIVI Advanced: Aug 22-26 19 AM-4 PM New for 2022! These fun, immersive, full -day sailing classes are for students aged 10-16 who really love sailing! REGISTER. NOW , , 3 Adult Sailing Classes Our highly experienced certified US Sailing instructors, a year-round windy bay, and a beautiful waterfront location combine to make our Sailing and On -the -Water classes some of the best and most beautiful in the Navigation & Seamanship Class Radar & Collision Avoidance In -Person Simulator Class May 21 110 AM-1 2:0 PM Learn to interpret the images your radar is displaying with hands-on radar exercises using our state-of- the-art Simulator. C G I ST L R N OV° 4 region. Summer Camps We offer a variety of summer day camps and classes for kids —all of them on boats! Kids can experience maritime life in many ways, from dinghy sailboats and rowboats to marine life. Boatshop Workshops Delve into the maritime world through craftsmanship, creativity, and education. From spoon carving to weeklong boat builds, our Boatshop offers a wide variety of workshops for all ages and skill levels! Navigation & Seamanship Our virtual Navigation & Seamanship classes are designed to make you a better, safer, and more confident mariner —all while learning from home via Zoom. Classes are taught live with interactive presentations and resources you can keep. SEE SCH EDU + RE-"3STE,-' 6 April 12-13 Rules of the Road & Aids to Navigation —Virtual Who has right of way? Where's the channel? In this class, you'll learn how to navigate safely around hazards and other vessels. April 19-20 Electronic Navigation & VHF —Virtual This is an introduction to the many electronic tools and instruments that can help us navigate safely. May 1-28 Duckworks Boatshop Takeover An open platform workshop that allows you to choose what to build while receiving guidance from the Boatshop manager. May 7 Outboards: Maintenance, Care, and Troubleshooting A breakdown of the proper steps one can take to make sure their outboard motor is in prime working order all season long. May 10-11 Radar, Collision Avoidance, and Night Navigation —Virtual Learn to interpret the images your radar is displaying with video radar exercises from our simulator. May 16-20 Basic Keelboat Full Course Learn to sail and receive your US Sailing Basic Keelboat Certification when you take the full US Sailing Basic Keelboat course. July 5-8 Learn to Sail —Intermediate Half Day Students who have already taken our Beginner Sailing Course can perfect their sailing skills as they sail in Optis, Ns, and 420s. July 5-8 Learn to Sail —Advanced Half Day Students explore advanced sailing such as buoy racing, Port Townsend Bay distance sailing, and other advanced technical sailing skills. 8 July 5-8 Lil Scuppers Half Day Camp PM Lil Scuppers is our maritime summer camp for the youngest campers, ages 5-7. July 11-15 Learn to Sail —Beginner Half Day Beginner Sailing is our fun introduction to basic sailing skills. Depending upon the comfort level and size of the student, they will be sailing in either Optis or FJs. July 18-22 Lil Scuppers Half Day Camp AM Lil Scuppers is our maritime summer camp for the youngest campers, ages 5-7. July 18-22 Lil Scuppers Half Day Camp PM Lil Scuppers is our maritime summer camp for the youngest campers, ages 5-7. ( .) Share OForward 9 R Aiz 21,11 @NorthwestMaritimeCenter @nw_maritime e 48"«� Swan � \' �, � � Hote Copyright c0 2022 Northwest Maritime Center, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website. Our mailing address is: Northwest Maritime Center 431 Water Street Port Townsend, Washington 98368 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update our preferences or unsubscribe from this list. 10 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, April 11, 2022 9:02 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Local 20/20 Weekly Announcements From: Local 20/20 Sent: Monday, April 11, 2022 9:00:27 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Local 20/20 Weekly Announcements Local 20/20 Weekly Announcements April 11, 2022 1 edited by Karen Richards Rufous Hummingbird by Wendy Feltham *Editor's Note for regular readers: It's easy to keep up-to-date with our long newsletter by looking for items marked *New* or *Updated*. These are items that have been added or updated this week. Everything else has appeared in prior newsletters, and may be skipped if you have already read about it. This Week Jefferson County Recycling changes presentation - Mon, Apr iith June 1, 2022, bottles and jugs will be the only type of plastics accepted for recycling. Bottles and jugs have the highest value resins and are recyclable domestically rather than sending the other plastic to a foreign country where they pull out the good stuff and throw the rest in an unregulated landfill or is burned. Both options pollute our environment significantly. N Learn more about these changes and why Jefferson County has been ahead of the curve with recycling for 30 years! Lots of time to answer your questions too! • Presentation #1: Monday, April 11; FinnRiver Cidery; 124 Center Road, Chimacum; 6-7PM • Presentation #2: Tuesday, April 19; online via Zoom; io-mhm • Presentation #3: Saturday, April 23; online via Zoom; io-iiAM Check the web page for Zoom links closer to the presentation dates. Community Healthcare Access Monthly Meeting - Wed, Apr 13th *Online* 20/20's Community Healthcare Access Group is a long running forum of people from the community concerned about healthcare access in Jefferson County. Discussion topics include Charity Care issues at the hospital, Legislative actions supporting local healthcare, public health issues, dental care, mental health and more. There is no membership needed, the public is welcome. Contact alber stg ein(@gmail.com for the Zoom link to the meeting if interested, along with historical background on the group. Time: Noon-1:30pm I Location: Online Climate Working Group - Thurs, Apr 14th *Online* *Updated* in learning what is happening locally on climate change, discussing current and potential new projects, and sharing news on climate change? This working group includes both climate mitigation (reducing greenhouse gases) and climate adaptation (preparing for climate impacts) aspects. The first hour will be a discussion of current and proposed projects - gather feedback on existing projects, share successes, and brainstorm on possible future projects. The second hour will be a general discussion of current climate topics - what's been in the news, learning opportunities, etc. Feel free to join for either half. For the online meeting information, contact cagP12020.org. Time: 3 — 5pm I Location: Zoom Asian Giant Hornets: What you need to know - Tues, Apr 14th *Online* JEFFERSON COUNTY { MASTERGARDENER FOUNDATION Join the Jefferson County Master Gardener Foundation to hear Outreach and Education Specialist Cassie Cichorz from the Washington State Department of Agriculture as she shares valuable information we need to know about the Asian Giant Hornet: its biology, the threats it brings to our state and how to manage this invasive 3 species. For more information go to jefferson.wsu.edu or jcmgf.org and click on Asian Giant Hornets, Time: 31m I Location: Zoom Upcoming Events Local 2o/2o Council Meeting - Wed, Apr loth *Online* e monthly Local 20/20 Steering Council meeting is open to all and welcomes those interested in active involvement in Local 20/20 leadership. Newcomers are always welcome. For a virtual orientation, or online meeting information, please us contact us at info@12020.org. Time: 4 — 6pm I Location: Online Meaningful Movie: The Story of Plastic - Fri, Apr 22nd *New* *Online* ' THE STORY OF PLASTIC is a searing expose revealing the ugly truth behind plastic pollution and the false solution of plastic recycling. Different from every other plastic documentary you've seen, this film presents a cohesive timeline of how we got to our current global plastic pollution crisis and how the oil and gas industry has successfully manipulated the narrative around it. From the extraction of fossil fuels and plastic disposal to the global resistance fighting back, THE STORY OF PLASTIC is a life -changing, Emmy-winning film depicting one of the world's most pressing environmental issues. Watch the film on your own device between April 16 and April 22, then join the community discussion on Zoom on April 22 at TOO PM. AFTER YOU REGISTER YOU WILL RECEIVE A WEEK-LONG SCREENING LINK TO USE ON YOUR OWN DEVICE — SCREENING WINDOW April 16 to April 22. Register now. Time: 7pm I Location: Zoom (link provided with registration) Earth Day Invasive Plant Removal - Sat, Apr 23rd 4 FORT FLAGLER Scotch Broom Removal Help restore the natural beauty at Fort Flagler State Park by removing invasive plant species. Friends of Fort Flagler is organizing a park clean up on April 23rd between gam and ipm. They're looking for volunteers to sign up for two-hour shifts (9-11 or 11-1). The Park will be giving free day passes to any volunteer who does not have state park passes. Volunteers will bring their own tools, water, masks, and gloves and be directed to a specific site. Register. Time: gam-ipm I Location: Fort Flagler State Park Earth Day Beach Cleanup - Sun, Apr 24th *New* partnership with WA CoastSavers, the PTMSC annual Earth Day beach cleanup brings volunteers together from far and wide to clean the beaches in our area. Volunteers collect and sort debris as well as contribute data on their findings to the Ocean Conservancy's international database. Join on April 23rd, from ipm - 5Pm at any of 4 cleanup locations: Fort Worden State Park, Downtown PT, Indian Island County Park, or Shine Tidelands State Park. Find more details for each location and register on the Washington CoastSavers registration nape. The first ioo participants will receive a $5 food gift card to the PT Food Coop and Olympic Disposal will be providing free trash and recycling services for this event. Additional support for this event was provided by the WA Department of Ecology. Time: 1-51)m I Location: Choose between Fort Worden State Park, Downtown PT, Indian Island County Park, or Shine Tidelands State Park Earth Day Beach Cleanup - Sun, Apr 24th FORT FLAG ER Protecting Puget Sound from trash and winter debris begins we each of us! As waste continually pollutes our parks, waterways, and beaches, Friends of Fort Flagler provides the opportunity for you to help protect and restore the environment we all call home. Friends of Fort Flagler is organizing a park clean up on April 24th between gam 5 and ipm. They're looking for volunteers to sign up for two-hour shifts (9-11 or 11-1). The Park will be giving free day passes to any volunteer who does not have state park passes. Register. Time: 9am-1pm I Location: Fort Flagler State Park, Lower Camp area TLAB Meeting - Mon, Apr 25th *New* Transportation Lab is a Local 20/2o Action Group working to promote a transportation system that minimizes need for personal motor vehicles. Such a transportation system must be safe, convenient and healthy, and it must be based on: People walking, the most healthful mode; People bicycling, the most efficient mode; Mass transit, the most efficient for moving large numbers of people: Private vehicles for providing services and moving small numbers of people Time: 4:30 — 6:oopm I Location: In person. Contact Richard Dandridge Rain garden work party in Port Townsend - Fri, Apr 29th *New* Jefferson Count Marine Resources Committee The Jefferson County Marine Resources Committee is looking for volunteers to help with revamping some of the rain gardens in Port Townsend! They will meet at the rain garden located on the corner of Lincoln and Adams Streets in Port Townsend at ioAM on Friday, April 29th. Volunteers will help weed and add mulch here, then may follow leads to help with some maintenance at other rain gardens around Port Townsend. Vaccinations and masks (when within 6 ft) are encouraged. Register here. For help registering or other questions about the event, contact Monica at monica.montgomeryl Owsu. edu. Time: loam-31)m I Location: Lincoln and Adams Streets, Port Townsend Food Coop 5oth Anniversary Party - Wed, May 4th *New* Food Co-op invites all Coop members to come and celebrate its 5oth year of Cooperation. Musical guests include Uncle Funk and the Dope Six, Matt Sircerly & Danny Barnes, Alexa Sunshine -Rose, and the Unexpected Brass Band. "Five dollar eats" served up by some of Jefferson County's hottest chefs will be an event centerpiece. 6 Nadine's kitchen, Batch Brothers and the Friendly Nettle will each be selling delicious and affordable food offerings. Local beverage producers Propolis Brewing, Finnriver Cidery, Mead Werks Blue Jay Kombutchan and Mountain Rose Tea will all be available. In fact, they all have created special celebratory batches of brew for this momentous occasion. Games, music, food, friends, prizes and a shared purpose; it's a Coop Party. Time: 4-91)m I Location: Jefferson County Fairgrounds, 4907 Landes Street, Port Townsend Jefferson County Master Gardeners 2022 Annual Plant Sale - Sat, May 7th *New* �! JEFFERSON COUNTY 4 MASTER FOUNDATION Master Gardeners have been busy for months selecting, seeding and propagating thousands of plants, including small trees, shrubs, perennials, annuals, ground covers, vegetables, fruits and succulents — now ready for purchase and planting in your garden! From two-inch seedlings to young trees, a rainbow of colorful annuals and perennials are available at enticing prices. All plants are grown and cared for by Master Gardener experts under the best conditions and include many varieties not available at local nurseries. Shoppers may preview the plant and tree varieties on sale. All plants have been propagated by experienced Master Gardeners on a volunteer basis. Plants may vary in size from the photos shown on the site. The sale is in person this year. There will not be any online sales. This fundraiser supports WSU Extension services in Jefferson County and agricultural grants for schools and other nonprofit organizations. Time: gam-2pm I Location: Chimacum High School, 91 West Valley Road, Chimacum. Recurring Events COVID-i9 Update - Mondays *Online* a n Public Helt Join the weekly o:oo am meeting of the Jefferson County Board of County Commissioners (BOCC), including the 9:45 am COVID-19 update with Public Health Officer, Dr. Allison Berry. You can also listen live to Dr. Berry on KPTZ. Additional COVID-19 information is on the County website here. 7 Styrofoam Recycling - 2nd Mondays & 4th Saturdays (PT) & some Tuesdays (Port Ludlow) *Updated* The Port Townsend StyroCyclers can only accept pieces that are white, rigid, clean, and dry, with all tape, labels, paper, and cardboard removed. They also accept clean and dry packing peanuts of all colors and types (separated from the styrofoam), as well as white styrofoam food trays that are clean and free of stains and writing. Your materials will be inspected at your vehicle, and disqualified materials will be returned to you. Thanks to the Fort Worden PDA, the styrofoam is packed and stored at the Fort Worden Battery Putnam, then delivered to Kent once per month thanks to OlyCap and Northwest Harvest food bank trucks. At the Kent facility, a densifier machine uses heat and pressure to convert the styrofoam into a toothpaste -like consistency that cools into heavy, glassy blocks, which are then sold to manufacturers of products such as picture frames, construction details, and surfboard blanks. The densified product is in high demand because it is less expensive than virgin plastic. You can check the schedule and/or message them at any time at PTStvroCyclersogmail.com or through their Facebook pate. Port Townsend Styrofoam Recycling pick-up - Mon, Apr iith & Sat, Apr 23rd Time: io:oo-noon I Location: Fort Worden's Battery Putnam, which is near Alexander's Castle (229 Alexander's Loop). Park your vehicle in the middle of the street in front of the battery. Port Ludlow Styrofoam Recycling pick up - Tues, Apr 12th *New* Time: 9-10:3oam I Location: Port Ludlow Marina, Bridge Deck off Harbor Drive Road Cooperative Cafe - 2nd Mondays *Online* economics for peace institute An online incubator talking space for emergent cooperatives. Offering supportive mentored environment for new housing linked to grower and work spaces (studios, workshops, etc). Beyond Leasing: Co -develop new right -sized sustainable independent housing and land ownership through producer cooperatives. Opening new investor pools for coop financing in the region. Video Call Link - Free and Open Event: econ4peace.org/econ4peace-video-call/ Questions? Write directly to: salishseaRecon4peace.org Time: 6pm I Location: Online Climate on Tap - First Wednesdays Create a Climate for Change! Climate on Tap is back — in person in FinnRiver's cozy Pavilion! CliMato Each Climate on Tap is held on the first Wednesday of the month from 7-8:30 pm. Co -sponsored on Tap by Local 20/20 Climate Action, Jefferson County Public Health, and FinnRiver Cidery. This is • concerned about human impacts not a lecture series, but a discussion format. For further information email Laura Tucker or call on our climate? • Wishing you knew what you can 360-379-4491• do to make a difference? • There's plenty you can do that will help change the patteml 8 The Groundwork Project - Wednesdays economics for peace institute The Groundwork Project - The Institute supports local people in establishing meaningful, place - based indicators of community well-being and ecosystem stewardship. Two -Year, 3 County Pilot Study - Kitsap, Clallam and Jefferson - to establish baseline indicators of community well-being and ecosystem stewardship. Drop in event. Stop by when you can. Limit of 20. Or, choose one circle for ongoing involvement. - Lunch circle : iiam to ipm (drop in for min of 45 minutes) - Supper circle: 41m to 6pm (drop in for min of 45 minutes) - Debrief/Analysis: 1:30pm to 3:3opm. (optional) Questions? econ4peace.org/the-groundwork-project. Online options with preregistration. Write salishsea(@-econ4peace.org for link and password. Research will culminate Earth Day week with evenings online and two sessions of in person time at the Chimacum Grange on Saturday, April 23. You are welcome to join in at any time. Times: see above I Location: Chimacum Grange Birding in the Park - 2nd and 4th Fridays -verly McNeil, Admiralty Audubon trip leader and photographer, is conducting bird walks at Fort agler. Birding and nature tours are on the 2nd and 4th Fridays of each month. Wear sturdy otwear and dress for changeable weather. Bring binoculars and your own water. Forest Bathing Walks at Fort Worden - Sundays From Olympic Peninsula Mindfulness. Walk — Sit — Walk: As you enter the `cathedral' of the park's spaces you can walk comfortably and safely far apart without masks, or as you All choose. Their walk follows paths linking the woods and meadows in the park. Several times they A. will pause, listen to a nature poem, and sit in silence at the Memory Vault; or possibly with a bit of guided meditation led by Ellen Falconer, mindfulness teacher. Please wear clothing which will keep you warm and dry, as we may be sitting or standing about in wet, chilly, invigorating weather. For more information call 36o-316-6544 or visit their website. Walks are on Sunday mornings. Time: 9:30 — ii AM I Location: Fort Worden State Park, meet in front of the Nora Porter Commons Building, 210 Battery Way 9 Community Notices Editor announcement: Historically, we have not accepted "sales -related" submissions to this newsletter. We are reevaluating this position, and will now accept submissions related to vending and sales that are related to our mission on a trial basis for addition to this Community Notices section. Please refer to the bottom of this newsletter for how to submit an announcement. EDC Community Goal Survey - Input Needed! This is an invitation to participate in the Community Goal Survey, which seeks to understand the j��j##�,,,� goals and priorities of Jefferson County residents related to community economic development 4w a i wr, SQ and planning. Your unique feedback will ensure a broad range of perspectives are represented. The survey will take 10-20 minutes to complete. Here is the link: https://bit.ly/ASAPJefferson. The survey will be live until the grd week of April. Jefferson County, WA is taking part in the Area Sector Analysis Process (ASAP), a community -driven tool that informs sustainable community economic development decisions. ASAP uses national and local data to identify compatible and desirable business sectors unique to each community. This link described the process (https://www.usu.edu/wrdc/asap). The EDC will be evolving our economic development strategy and work plan based on the interpretation of the data in this study. Thank you! Car Free Day Event — Wed, Jun ist — Save the Date and Recruiting Volunteers! are interested in being part of the planning team, or donating to this event, please contact us at carfreeday(@12o2o.org. Mark your calendar for June ist, and start thinking about how you can leave your car at home (or drive less) that day!" Volunteer Opportunity - Local 20/20 Climate Art Action Vs. Wall Street I I Help Wanted! *New* 10 Street banks and insurers profit off of climate chaos every day, investing in fossil fuel infrastructure and breaking public promises to go green. Several big environmental groups are working together to #defundclimatechaos through protest, public pressure and proposals on shareholder meetings in April & May. This week 30,000 giant street art posters are going up all over the USA and Canada to raise awareness on this issue. Danielle Fodor is looking for help to place 3o big art posters (5 1/2 ft x 3 1/2 ft) around here. Contact Danielle if you're able to place a poster at your business, on your fence, in your yard, or wheatpaste one on a bank. Danielle Fodor daniellefodorogmail.com. Kul Kah Han Native Garden (KKH) — A Call for Volunteers & Educational Opportunities! Kul Kah Han Native Plant Demonstration Gar4en t Chimacum, WA , Their mission is to inspire and guide our regional community toward the appreciation, cultivation and use of native plants in home landscaping. They hold Volunteer Working Days at HJ Carroll Park every Wednesday from 10:3oam to 2:3opm (March -October). KKH is seeking new volunteers to join their passionate team. If you are interested, please contact their Volunteer Coordinator, Alan Potter alan.potter2,50gmail.com, to arrange an introduction and orientation of the garden. They also sponsor educational presentations on related subjects such as wildlife habitat, beneficial mycorrhizae, wise water use, propagation, ethnobotany, sustainable landscaping and more! Please contact their Outreach Coordinator, Christina Ballew ballewsingh(&gmail.com, if you are interested in these educational opportunities. Gardening requires lots of water — most of it in the form of perspiration! They look forward to seeing you at the Garden! WSU Seed Library on JC Library Bookmobile SEED LIBRARY WAY i I NGlTON &I'NT'E UN1VE RS11Y E X T E N S I G N Jefferson County Moster Gardener Program The JCL Bookmobile is partnering with WSU Master Gardeners to bring seeds directly to you! Borrow a variety of seeds from the Seed Library and grow beautiful, healthy plants to eat and for seed saving. At the end of the season, return a portion of your seeds to the Seed Library for the next year's borrowers. The Seed Library will visit all bookmobile stops (except Paradise Bay) during the last week of each month, March through October. This year they will be offering only seeds grown within Jefferson County —the best seeds grown by your neighbors, friends, and local seed growers. Learn more and get the schedule Summer Job Opportunities with CedarRoot Folk School 11 Master Gardener Project Grant Requests due May 1, 2022 JEFFERSON COUNTY MASTERGARDENER FOUNDATION The Jefferson County Master Gardener Foundation is accepting grant requests for not -for - profit horticulture and environment stewardship projects. Typically up to $750 is reimbursed for projects that are completed within a year of approval (early June.) Please download the application form from JCMGF.org under the "resources" menu or contact nwesterRolvmpus.net. Applications are due by May 1, 2022, Jefferson Transit's Kingston Express *Updated* Jefferson Transit is launching a pilot that connects with the Kingston Fast Ferry to Seattle! There will be a morning run and an afternoon run Monday - Saturday (note the fast ferry only runs M - F currently.) The Jefferson County stops are Haines P&R, Four Corners P&R, and the Gateway Visitors Center. Find out more at https•//jeffersontransit.comZl4kingstonexpress/. You can show your support for this pilot by getting on board, literally! Jefferson County Farmers Market BIPOC Start -Up Business Fund *Updated* MR�- EST. 1992 JEFFERSON COUNTY#10 "pFARMERS +� MARKETS PORT TOWNSEND • CNIMACUM The Black Indigenous and people of color (BIPOC) Start -Up Business Fund, now in its second year, accepts applications on an ongoing basis. They are excited to welcome more BIPOC vendors to market with small grants Of $50041,500. Community Resources 12 Biochar for Farms & Gardens ie Olympic Carbon Fund is continuing its mission to increase carbon sequestration in the soils our region by continuing to give away biochar for food -growing soils. Farms, market gardens d large shared gardens are eligible for a full cubic yard, while home food gardeners may rtake of the "Bucket Share". Other soil regeneration projects may also be eligible for free char, if community resilience is enhanced by the project. New Public Health Dept E-Newsletter aenersgn county Public mean NEWSLETTESOT, x Get on the list to receive our first e•newslettert. sign up here: Mttpx//jeffttsonCaMtyp�WkhNkh.ag/Nxt:asyz. Sign up at htti)s://jeffersoncouatTublichealth.org/list.aspx, and allow your mail tool to receive e-mails from listserv(@civigplus.com. Free art posters promoting peace and a healthy Earth HELP promote ideas of healthy change NOW! With WAR activities in Europe (risking Nuclear contamination) and the CLIMATE CRISIS growing, these changes are URGENT. Let's stop destructive practices that are destroying our Earth, while protecting our communities and cultures. Art Posters are now available to download (more will come soon) on a new website www.thegentlerevolution.com. Please download these FREE posters to digitally post or print to post — in community places, storefronts or make into small handbills to give out. Let these ideas grow life with love. New informational Electric Vehicle web tools for Jefferson County 13 Jefferson County's 2018 Greenhouse Gas Inventory indicates that transportation accounts for 66% of our greenhouse gas emissions. This might be your best excuse yet for buying the most responsive (fast), fun vehicle you've ever had! Our community has a new set of web tools that can help you in your EV research: https://jeffersoncan.org/electric-vehicles/ Local 20/20's COVID-19 Resources Online is a central location for community -wide information relating to COVID-19, updated frequently. Includes Reliable Information Sources, Vaccine info, Food Sources, Community Covid-19 Resource pages, Giving and Getting Assistance, Community Events Online, Community Face Mask Program, and information web posts related to COVID-19. Look in the red box at the top of the page for all the newest information. Master Gardeners Q&A CLINIC 4 Have a question about a plant/insect/composting/landscape issue? Master Gardener volunteers are here to help. You can fill out our online intake form and a Master Gardener will get back to you via email. Just Soup on Tuesdays jl4st � !T,;� NO Every Tuesday at 11:30 -1:30, Just Soup provides free, hot soup lunches at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, 1020 Jefferson St, on the Tyler St. bus line (by the Bell Tower). Enter the rear church parking lot on Franklin, and whether you are on foot, bike, or car, you will be in line for curbside pickup, with masks, gloves, and safe distancing protocols in place. Pick up a lunch for yourself or your neighbor in need. No questions asked. Many partners and supporters have come together to feed Port Townsend one bowl at a time. This information also appears on Local 20/20's COVID-19 Resources Meals Page. Time: Tuesdays, 11:3o AM -1:30 PM I Location: St. Paul's Episcopal Church, 1020 Jefferson St. 14 Emergency Text Alerts from Jefferson County up to receive Jefferson County Department of Emergency Management's emergency alerts by text on your mobile phone and/or by email. NIXLE messages provide crucial information in an emergency & are sent directly to your text -enabled device and/or email. The sign up web page also has information about other alert and warning systems, including the tsunami warning system and the WSDOT alert system. NPREP: Prepared Neighborhoods , fto—L, Prepare for emergencies with your neighbors by joining or starting an NPREP neighborhood. There • . • � � • � � are currently over loo NPREP neighborhoods organizing here in Jefferson County. Learn if you live in A Jefferson County Action Group an NPREP trained neighborhood. Learn about NPREP. Action A Tool for Neighborhood Organization * Nextdoor Nextdoor is a private social network for YOUR neighborhood. Use this link to join one of 59 Nextdoor Neighborhoods in Jefferson County. Currently there are 14,567 subscribers, with many new members joining each day. Email Pete Hubbard with questions or comments. Calling Local Photographers Local 20/20 Weekly Announcements invites local photographers to submit images that capture the character of our community and its natural setting. For the opening photo of each weekly email (which is also posted to our website), we seek local color, horizontal ("landscape") orientation, and jpeg format. Please no children, pets or recognizable faces. Kindly send to eventsM202o.org. Please include your name in the jpeg filename. We are an all -volunteer non-profit, so compensation for your talent and generosity is a photo credit and our profound thanks. 15 Resilience Readings Do you have readings, podcasts or videos to share that are aligned with our Local 20/20 mission? Please submit them here. A Better Transportation Future LLikBj David Thielk shares the TLAB's vision for a better transportation future in the latest Local 20/20 Port Townsend Leader column. A vibrant Water Street filled with walkers and cyclists, tourists on bikes, and the absence of cars are part of the vision. Learn more about the vision and the road map to getting there in the full column. New IPCC Report Warns Climate Change is Causing Dangerous Disruption in Nature and Affecting Billions of People "Human -induced climate change is causing dangerous and widespread disruption in nature and affecting the lives of billions of people around the world, despite efforts to reduce the risks. People and ecosystems least able to cope are being hardest hit, said scientists in the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report..." notes the Rress release for the the latest IPCC report, "The Summary for Policymakers of the IPCC Working Group II report, Climate Change 2022: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability", which was released on 2/27/2022. The press release also notes that ""There are options to adapt to a changing climate. This report provides new insights into nature's potential not only to reduce climate risks but also to improve people's lives." The report itself states that "Approximately half of the species assessed globally have shifted polewards or, on land, also to higher elevations." The report also highlights that we need to act now to both reduce emissions and adapt to the changes - "There is a narrowing window of opportunity to shift pathways towards more climate resilient development futures as reflected by the adaptation limits and increasing climate risks, considering the remaining carbon budgets." A shorter summary of the report can be found in this World Resource Institute article. 16 Local 20/2o Leader Column - Showing Our Love for Our Community MEE11N.1Rv.wnmmfiEhvmMLocal 20/20's latest column in the Port Townsend Leader highlights how we can show our love for our community through volunteering. Suzanne Jones describes some ways that we can help co -create a community that serves the needs for all of its citizens, and is even more resilient in the future. What sort of new story do need to build that future? It highlights the many organizations in our county that are helping addressing the needs of our community. And as Suzanne ends, "As we are reminded of how much we love our family and friends this February, let us also remember how much we love our community and consider some ways we can volunteer to keep it regenerating itself." Quimper Community Harvest 2021 Gleaning Season and Applesauce Project Successes Quimper Community Harvest group, part of the Local 20/2o Local Food Action Group, made impressive progress in 2021 with over six tons of fruit delivered to twenty organizations! And, the group successfully fundraised for, and implemented, the "applesauce project", where a cooler was designed and built to quickly cool the fresh sauce. The result was 700 pounds of applesauce being made, to be offered to local schools and other organizations from now until next season. Learn more about these successes, and how you can get involved, in the recent Local 20/20 PT Leader Column about the efforts. Anticipated Meteorological "Bomb" Documented by King Tide Team J "%The Local 20/20 King Tide team documented the tides and water levels on 10/25/21, during a rapidly developing low pressure system, referred to a meteorological "bomb". The event was selected based on the predicted storm surge and strong winds during a time of moderately high tide. Since the winds had largely subsided and the remaining waves were in the 1' range, the wave runup appeared to be only about oX. With that in mind, this event was a good chance to compare the storm surge forecast to the difference between predicted and observed water levels at the tide 17 gauge. In this case, the surge forecast was very good! See the post linked above for photos of the event and the full analysis. Local 20/2o Leader Column on Electric Vehicles and New Web Tools Jefferson .org Climate Action Now The October Local 20/2o Leader Column highlighted some of the many reasons to consider buying an electric car. It discussed how far they can go on a charge, compares costs, and notes rebates available. Also described are the wide range of electric vehicles available now - not just passenger cars, but SUVs, motorcycles, and pickup trucks! And it mentions the new web tools where you can learn more about Electric Vehicles at https://jeffersoncan.org/electric-vehicles/. Local 20/20 Mission Working together toward local sustainability and resilience -integrating ecology, economy and community through action and education. Local Food Next? Health & Wellness Resiliency Education Of heart Emergency Action Groups are where we do most of our work. Each is focused on an interrelated aspect of sustainability. Visit 12020.orto learn what the different action groups are working on. 18 Want to submit an announcement? We welcome notices of events, calls for participation and other items of interest. Local 20/2o Announcements goes out every Monday morning. Please submit the following in paragraph form: Subject or event. Brief description. Day, date, time. Venue address. Contact information. Web links. Include a logo or a photo in jpeg format. See existing announcements for examples — no bullets, colored fonts, etc., plain text is best. Email to eventsP1202O.org by 8:oo PM Saturday to be included in the next Monday's newsletter. We post announcements aligned with Local 20/20's mission and of interest to our community. Note that we don't post on line petitions, pleas to contact legislators, or gofundme type items. Local 20/2o reserves the right to edit or reject submissions. If you have questions or concerns, please email us at events(«)12o2o.org. The posting of any specific event does not in itself endorse the organization or the event. We reserve the right to edit or reject submissions considered inappropriate or inconsistent to our mission statement. Consider forwarding Local 2o/2o Announcements to a friend. New subscribers can sign up here. Copyright © 2021 by Local 2ol2o. All rights reserved. Our mailing address is: 1240 W. Sims Way #12, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. This email was sent to heisenhour(a)co.iefferson.wa.us why did 1 get this? unsubscribe from this list update subscription preferences 19 Local 20/20 • 1240 W. Sims Way #12 - Port Townsend, Wa 98368 - USA Grow your business with C mailchimp 20 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Monday, April 11, 2022 1:09 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: NACo Achievement Awards deadline this Friday, April 15 From: NACo Sent: Monday, April 11, 2022 1:07:37 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: NACo Achievement Awards deadline this Friday, April 15 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Having trouble viewing this email? Click Here APPLICATION DEADLINE THIS FRIDAY, APRIL 15: APPLY TODAY FOR THE 2022 NACo ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS 1 Earn national recognition and share your county's innovative programs by applying for a 2022 National Association of Counties (NACo) Achievement Award. The application deadline is this Friday, April 15 at 11:59 p.m. EDT. Please note: Applications must be submitted and paid for by April 15 at 11:59 p.m. EDT to be eligible for an award. ADDITIONAL OPPORTUNITIES TO SHARE YOUR COUNTY'S STORY Celebrate National County Government Month Each April, National County Government Month is a celebration of counties and an excellent opportunity to showcase how you are serving residents and helping your community thrive. LEARN MORE Invite students to enter the "I Love My County Because" art contest In an effort to bolster civic education and inform residents of the role of county government, we are inviting students in grades 1-12 to participate in the "I Love My County Because" art contest. LEARN MORE Join NACo's Untold Stories campaign and tell your county's story Counties across the country continue to invest in pandemic recovery and plan for the future. Tell the story of your county's efforts. Use our online form to tell your county's story, and visit NACo.org/UntoldStories to learn more. LEARN MORE I SHARE YOUR STORY NATIONAL AL IATION OfICOUNTIB 660 North Capitol Street, NW, Suite 400 Washington, D.C. 20001 Did someone forward you this email? Sign up to stay up-to-date on topics affecting America's counties! Click here to unsubscribe. ro a a z z r n m z W m m 3 N �a�++ £H£a Z�v M�z o0 (N� 7C z CA m H N D m m z z v D a o z m 00 Q) w a, w a a 0 0 C. M r �- o zr c " W m m z z n OM 0 on m M°x kw 0 H Cl) Z Z m .A a Q `N rCTi Z � m N c� O co N O OD O N r r-i n m z CA m v —M vv D r-4W a v 0x O ! Z 0m v mzCo o Co Z H O .� z ..I D 0 --I m me X �H r I�1 F-1 �Z A n -1 O h-i .9 77 zo D z vD� v m m 0 > D z � m a D W CO)" N O OW O O NZ N � v O co W O O -n C- m m m m v v O z DI m O A O O N O N N rn 0n Q "n rin U) s/i y. ) Z° 00 Z0 V / m m 0 m 0 m v H w M zee a z CA 9 H H H m z bi m aro 9 3 r r r W v. r 'b C+7 oWvN r m z� M z a C+7 H 0 w H a � Oo OD W co co 0 O O m 0 M N W 0 C+1 z E z M zr m m zmm v z H r m m m �i O tD i O co O N r M n m z co m 0 •�• m WO) a " °r° a 0" CO CO _ ox z Os o m O .. 4 O C,O Z z � a O --1 m me x 'DH r N r-i z p D0 G im O z� > z vD-i v m mo D z Oa z "t m D D W O H O N W O OO N Z 9 N.i o O� V COO J C- m m m CO) o O D z m O A O N O N N jeffbocc From: LWV of Jefferson County <Iwvjeffcowa@gmail.com> Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 7:15 AM To: Rose Ann Carroll; Quinn Grewell Cc: jeffbocc Subject: Election Worker Appreciation Day Attachments: 2022 April Thank Election Workers.pdf ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. The League of Women Voters - Jefferson County wishes to thank you formally for all that you do in support of democracy. Please share our thanks (in the attached pdf) with everyone in the office and all the volunteers. We absolutely appreciate you, Angela Angela Gyurko Pres, LWVJefferson County Unit at Large https://www.lwvwa.org/Jefferson April 12, 2022 Memorandum for: Quinn Grewell, Jefferson County Elections Rose Ann Carroll, Jefferson County Auditor From: League of Women Voters, Jefferson County CC: Jefferson County Board of County Commissioners Subject: Thank You, Elections Staff and Volunteers On April 12, 2022, the League of Women Voters -Jefferson County celebrates you, the essential election workers and volunteers who form the backbone of our democracy. We cherish our freedom to decide who will represent us in government, and we appreciate the critical role you play in ensuring the accuracy and safety of our voting process. We stand by your efforts to remain impartial and fair in your vital work. These past two years, election workers have toiled through stressful pandemic conditions and outside scrutiny, performing their duties with diligence and dedication. This is why we are joining groups across the nation today to say a hearty Thank You to everyone who has served during county elections these past few years. jeffbocc From: Washington State Parks <WA.Parks@public.govdelivery.com> Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2022 10:31 AM To: jeffbocc Subject: Washington State Parks E-News, April 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. MonthEarth itl 1'1 Pamper Mother Earth - and yourself - this Earth Day! What are you doing for Earth Day? 1 Pi 3 Have you been to Washington's official state waterfall? Whether you've been there 12 times or you're planning your first trip, Palouse Falls is a sight to behold! Our rangers have 10 tips to help make your visit positively unforgettable. (Unforgettable in a positive and safe way!) Find details in our latest Adventure Awaits blog. GTON Lin Manage Subscriptions I Unsubscribe All I Help I Contact Us I Subscribe This email was sent to jeffbocc@co.jefferson.wa.us using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: Washington State Parks and IP Recreation Commission 1111 Israel Road S.W. - Tumwater - WA 98501-6512 9OVDELIVERY 4 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 7:56 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: OCH Community Briefing I Apr 12, 2022 From: Olympic Community of Health Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 7:54:41 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: OCH Community Briefing I Apr 12, 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Stronger+.-regionof healthy people, thriving communities April 12, 2022 Monthly deep dive: 2022-2026 Strategic Plan Several years ago, partners across the Olympic region took time to identify needs and priorities to improve the health of the region. With the first wave of phase of OCH work coming to an end, we now have a new strategic plan. By leveraging our collective expertise, experience, and wisdom we can tackle these health issues that no single sector or Tribe can tackle alone. May 11: LGBTQ+ Core Competency Training OCH is pleased to offer an LGQTQ+ Core_Com,etenc training on May 11 from 1-3p at the Hood Canals Vista Pavilion. This event is free and open to the public and will support the health -serving workforce. We encourage participation from local behavioral health, community -based organizations, educators, first responders, hospitals, primary care, public health, social services, Tribes, and everything in-between. Summary: Olympic Action Collaboratives Kick-off Event OCH launched the Olympic Action Collaboratives on Mar 30, 2022, in alignment with the four focus areas in the strategic plan. Did you miss out on this event? Check out the summary video to learn about what was discussed at the kick-off event and what's coming up next. OCH to serve as regional lead for Care Connect Washington Olympic Community of Health is growing! In alignment with our strategic plan focus area of assuring that individual needs are met timely, easily, and compassionately, OCH is now under contract with the Department of Health to serve as the regional lead for Care Connect Washington. In the coming weeks and months, you'll start to see us set up the infrastructure for community -based care coordination starting with supports for community members in need while in isolation or quarantine for COVID-19 (food and care kits, fresh grocery delivery, and household supports). Down the road, we'll expand to other areas of care coordination in collaboration with partners across the region and state. This is an exciting growth area for OCH and we're proud to add value to partners and community members in this new way. Have questions? Contact Celeste for now and we'll soon introduce a new team member who will lead this important work. Are you interested in contracting with OCH to support this work? Great! A Request for Proposals (RFP) will be released in a few weeks to identify organizations to provide care coordination services. OCH is hiring a Community Hub Coordinator! This position will collaboratively launch a new initiative for Olympic Community of Health by establishing a community hub for community -based care coordination. Effective community -based care coordination will ensure that clients receive coordinated health and social services to address physical, behavioral, and social needs for optimal health and well-being. This position will coordinate the strategic and tactical development of the community hub including processes, systems, and partnership efforts. Opportunities & Resources May 26: Say It Out Loud Conference (competency in serving LGBTQ+ communities) Registration is now apen for the 21 st Annual Say It Out Loud (SIOL) Conference on Thursday, May 26. SIOL is a conference committed to increasing competency in serving LGBTQ+ individuals, families, and communities. This year's conference theme, "We Are Family," is meant to honor and recognize the many structures and diverse expression of families there are —biological and chosen. Scholarships available: Empower Others with Motivational Interviewing OCH is providing up to six scholarships for folks to attend the National Council for Well-being's "Empower Others with Motivational Interviewing"_trainin on Apr 21 from 9-1 pm (virtual). Scholarships are first come, first served and are open to anyone who lives or works in the Olympic region (Clallam, Jefferson, Kitsap counties). To inquire about a scholarship, please email och@olympicch.org. Mark your calendar Upcoming OCH events Board of Directors I May 9, 1-3p Add to calendar Olympic Action Collaboratives (contact OCH@olympicch.org for calendar invite) o Together, recovery is possible Apr 19, 1-2:30p I WSU Extension (Port Hadlock) o Access to the full spectrum of care Apr 27, 1-2:30p I WSU Extension (Port Hadlock) o Individual needs are met timely, easily, and compassionately May 4, 1-2:30p I WSU Extension (Port Hadlock) o Everyone housed Apr -May Members will be asked to schedule 1:1 meetings with OCH Follow usmnsocial media! Have you connected with us on Fooebook. |natagrom. Twitter, and Linkod|n? If not, be sure bofollow uatostay up todate nnall things OCH. In partnership, Together, poacknowledge, with humility, the indigenous peoples whose presence permeates the waterways, ,momlinms.valley .andmnvntainvmmo Olympic region. The land where xmare isthe territory mthe Coast nalisxPeoples, mparticular the oximooum.xoh.mmmh.S'manem.eunuamish.and Qui|eutotribes o"whose sacred land welive, work, and play. Click here tolearn more about the Indigenous land where you are. Olympic Community ofHealth, 41 Colwell St, Port Had|nok.Washington 0833O.United States, 3OO6338208 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 8:07 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Join County Auditor, Shoona Riggs, to Hear About our Next Election Cycle on Coffee with Colleen Wednesday at 8am From: Clallam EDC Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 8:05:56 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Kate Dean Subject: Join County Auditor, Shoona Riggs, to Hear About our Next Election Cycle on Coffee with Colleen Wednesday at 8am ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. CLALLAM COUNTY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL Join Shoona Riggs, Clallam County Auditor, on Wednesday on Coffee with Colleen 8am as she shares: • How Many Elected Positions are up for Election in 2022? • Which Ones are Up for Election at the State and Local Levels? • How does Someone File for Elected Office? • Who has Announced their Campaign on the PDC site? Do they have to? • What happens if no one files for a position? Does that happen frequently? • What Offices Vote Countywide vs. Just in their District? Why are they different? • Are the Districts for County, Port and PUD all the same? • What is our voter turnout rate in our county relative to other counties? • Why are some positions partisan and other are not? Plus any other Questions you've wondered about - This is your Opportunity to ask our Elections Expert! Join Zoom Meeting https://us02web.zoom. us/j/894745103O6?pwd=Vl IrRH hSRG 1nYVh3V3JXRzFSMmRodzO9 Meeting ID: 894 74510306 Passcode: 187447 One tap mobile +12532158782„89474510306#,,,,*187447# US (Tacoma) Dial by your location - 253 215 8782 (Tacoma) A Message from Clint Ostler, CEO of (FKA) Dash Air: Big Investments to Speed the Process Apologies for the lack of communication, we've been waiting on a few big items that we think will move us forward more quickly. Yes, time continues to march forward, and spring is here. We continue to make new and significant investments in preparation for launch and to assist in speeding up the process. First, we have hired a new full-time Director of Maintenance to support ongoing preparation work and to continue the development of our current programs. Second, we have added a second repair and overhaul facility in Aurora, Oregon to begin work on the second and third aircraft. This facility adds additional capabilities and experience that will help speed the process of conforming the aircraft for entry into service. With just about every aircraft maintenance facility in the country booked out for months, we are fortunate to have this facility working on our aircraft. Once we have our aircraft ready to go, we will launch a limited schedule and on -demand charter operations in early summer. It is our intent to publish a schedule with more daily frequencies later in the summer. It's exciting to note that with having an aircraft available for on -demand charters we will be able to accommodate groups of up to nine passengers looking at other destinations in northwest Washington. Update on the Name A new name is coming, but like everything else, we are still waiting on approval from the U.S. Trademark Office. As soon as we get approval, we'll be announcing the new name. We want to thank everyone for their patience as we work on getting up and running. We are very excited to serve the community! If you have any questions or comments, please feel free to visit us at Facebook. a e e The Universitv of WA SeaGrant Staff is Requesting Our Input: Washington SeaGrant (WSG), based at the University of Washington's (UW) College of the Environment, has been awarded funding to conduct economic resilience planning for a five -county region on the west coast of Washington. Working with a broad range of organizations focused on use and conservation of the marine environment and its resources, Washington SeaGrant supports the needs of an even larger set of stakeholders including our county. WSG hired the Western Region Development Center located at Utah State University to deploy their Area Sector Analysis Plan (ASAP) which looks at the economic priorities of counties determined through the survey below and by compiling an asset map (researched and delivered by the Clallam EDC). WRDC then produces a list of industries that they determine would be a good fit for our county. The Clallam EDC will consider the information produced by this process to add to our 5- year Countywide Economic Plan which will be published later this year. Please provide your input to the WRDC-designed survey below: Events - Online & In Person... Peninsula College Communitv Forums - Interviewing our Next President: Please email questions you would like us to ask the final candidates to kfrancis@pencol.edu(link sends e-mail). PC will try their best to get through all questions received. Public forums will take place the week of April 11 and 18. Each candidate will participate in a community three forum. Forums will be virtual, or community members are welcome to attend in -person in room: J-47. Masks are encouraged, social distancing guidelines will be followed, and maximum capacity for those attending in person is 50. There will be a brief introduction of each candidate, followed by a question -and -answer session. All who participate in the candidate forums will be asked to provide feedback to the Board of Trustees via an online survey at the conclusion of each forum. Completed forms will be given to the Board of Trustees for their review. Friday, April 15, 2022 - Dr. Kerry Levett: Community Forum: 1:30 — 2:00 pm Link to join virtually: https://pencol-edu.zoom.us/i/81638826146 Survey feedback link: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/president-finalist-forums-Ievett Monday, April 18 - Dr. Kristen Jones: Community Forum: 1:30 — 2:00 pm Link to join virtually: https://pencol-edu.zoom.us/i/81555568755 Survey feedback link: https:Hwww.surveymonkey.com/r/president-finalist-forums-iones Tuesday, April 19 - Dr. Suzanne Ames: Community Forum: 1:30 — 2:00 pm Link to join virtually: https://pencol-edu.zoom.us/i/87614595805 Survey feedback link: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/president-finalist-forums-ames Are you in the Creative Sector? Join the Creatives Academy Classes developed the State Department of Commerce's Senior Managing Director for Rural, Small Business and Marketing Solutions, Robb Zerr: This series of lessons covers a wide swath of business skills. It is designed to teach those in the creative sector how to turn their passion into a livelihood. Twelve sessions to help them create a sustainable, profitable business, from pricing and negotiation to intellectual property and going global. You can take the classes on your own time. It's already getting great reviews from creative sector professionals. Linking Financial Wellness and Small Business Development Webinar: Apr 27, 2022 2:00 - 3:30 pm Pacific Time - Register Here For many people in rural communities, small business ownership can be a powerful path out of poverty and into financial security and well-being. Yet in today's economy, financial systems are increasingly complex, business planning is challenging to navigate, and barriers to achieving financial stability can be daunting. Join the Washington State Microenterprise Association (WSMA) and the Financial Empowerment Network (FEN) on April 27th, 2022 2-3:30 pm, to learn more about providers across the state offering both financial wellness services and small business development services. We will explore how layering both types of support can multiply the positive impact for individuals and communities. Financial empowerment services can include financial education, counseling, or coaching, and work to ensure that communities have access to reliable information and trustworthy tools to help with topics such as dealing with debt and improving credit, budgeting, banking, taxes, starting a business, and homeownership. Small business development programs work with people who want to increase their income by starting their own business, learning to sell their products or services online and manage their cash flow We will hear from a panel of organizations grounded in both financial empowerment and small business development, who will share their journey to offering both types of support and what structures and partnerships have worked well for them along the way. This session will be interactive, and we hope you will leave with resources and new ideas about how you can support your clients in accessing both types of support. This webinar is brought to you by the Washington State Microenterprise Association (WSMA) and the Financial Empowerment Network (FEN) with support from Black Owned Business Excellence, Seattle Credit Union and the Washington State Department of Commerce. Thank You to Our New & Renewing Members... A Guide to the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act: A bipartisan Infrastructure law passed in mid -November, is historic in its size —the largest ever investments in broadband, rail and transit, clean energy, and water which allocated funding to over 350 distinct programs across more than a dozen federal departments and agencies. Other Good Stuff... Census Release Confirms Trends We Already Knew: Last week the US Census Bureau published a map and blog depicting the Decline in Population Growth in King & Kitsap Counties but Growth in Clallam and Jefferson Counties: Clallam County experienced a 1.4% increase in population from 2020 - 2021 which equaled 1,054 new residents. Jefferson County grew by 1.9% equaling a population increase of 628 new residents. US Census Map Link HERE. Ctstts�n county. Jefferson itiissp County, t111 Topics Q Washington0 4 County, ® 4 KftsWashCounty' 1 Washington Poputation estimates base, Apni 1, 2o2o, (V2021) m 77,155 &'32,977 & 275,611 Population, punt change - Apnt 1, 2020 (estlmates base) to m 1.4 ®i.9 8.0.5"4 Juty 1, 2021, (V2021) Population, Census.AprN 1, 2020 77,155 32,977 275.611 Poputat on, Census, Apd 1, 2010 71,404 29,872 251,133= Resources for Employer Health Insurance for Employees 6 Are you looking to provide health insurance for your employees? Here are a few Washington State options! Business Health Trust One Redmond Clallam County Data from Dept of Revenue: The most recent published information from the Washington State Department of Commerce Tax Statistics Reports: • As of July 1, 2019 Clallam County had 6,742 Registered Businesses. • As of July 1, 2020 Clallam County had 6,443 Registered Businesses. • As of July 1, 2021 Clallam County had 6,649 Registered Businesses. Clallam County Free Food Resources WSU Extension has provided a comprehensive list of free food resources for Clallam county. To download the list click the button below. You can also find this and other resources at chooseclallamfirst.com/communityrelief Since 1981, the private, 501(c)(6) nonprofit EDC has been priority focused on recruiting quality new businesses to Clallam County while retaining the existing businesses and assisting in expansion. The EDC supports companies in creating new jobs and to grow the economy and infrastructure of our rural county and Washington State. Clallam County Economic Development Council 1 338 W 1st St., Suite 105, Port Angeles, WA 98362 Unsubscribe kdean@co.jefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by info@clallam.org powered by cGConstant Contact Try email marketing for free today! Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 8:51 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: -You're Invited to our 50th Celebration!• From: Andrea Stafford Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 8:48:37 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) Subject: 0You're Invited to our 50th Celebration!0 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. • • ` The ••• • •• invites• • come and celebrate its 50thyear of Cooperation with us. 50 years is definitely something to get excited about so get dressed in 70119MEN"is I I •M-36- UI I 233113=6 Date and Time: Event schedule 4PM - Alexa Sunshine Rose 5PM - Matt Sircely and Danny Barnes 6:30 - Community Portrait + CAKE 6:45 - The Unexpected Brass Band 7:15 - Uncle Funk and the Dope Six 9PM - Glow club juggling with members of NANDA & Flying Karamazov Brothers 3 music Alexa Sunshine -Rose $5 eats from: Glow Club Juggling Matt Sircely & Nadine's Kitchen Family Friendly Games Danny Barnes Friendly Nettle 70s Themed Unexpected Brass Band Batch Brothers Costume Contest Uncle Funk & the Dope Six Free dAArinks &CAKE! Photo Booth & Door Prizes' �xJ 1uFA tu;� tri f rr m"F^� ad v.� X r.� 4a"• ✓s"e� d� ,."�1 �S, ,t%3 ii9, 1 t"dl `p "tt � �.":� C§. ,✓., ,�; ? P f(E P� 3§`��3�Pi� b&k.. s9 ffa+., ft , ;.: KEG' � CITY q FISH r COMPANI, MEAT SEAFOOOD- POULTRY` Copyright© 2022 The Food Co-op, All rights reserved. You chose to receive these emails when you signed up to be a member of The Food Co-op. Our mailing address is: The Food Co-op 414 Kearney St Port Townsend Port Townsend, WA 98368-8302 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. 4 mailchimp Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 8:51 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: -You're Invited to our 50th Celebration!• From: Andrea Stafford Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 8:48:37 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) Subject: oYou're Invited to our 50th Celebration!0 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. ••• •s - • • • -anT ce •ate its ! - • •••- with us. 50 years is definitely something to get excited about so get dressed Musical guests include Uncle Funk and the Dope Six, Matt Sircerly & Danny V, W,arnes, Alexa Sunshine -Rose, and the Unexpected Brass Band. "Five dollar eats" served up by some of Jefferson County's hottest chefs Nadine's kitchen, Batch Brothers and the Friendly Nettle will each be sellin-(,@ delicious and affordable food offerings. Local beverage producers Propolis Brewing, Finnriver Cidery, Mead Werks Blue Jay Kombutchan and Mountain Rose Tea will all be available. In fact, they all have created special celebratory batches of brew for this momentous occasio-t. We are also hosting a 70s Costume Contest, family games, and door prizes. Prizes include tickets to THING, Departure Festival, Co-op Branded Merch, Local Products, and lots of other Food Co-op vendor swag. Location 0) Date and Time: Wednesday, May 4th, 2022 Event schedule 4PM - Alexa Sunshine Rose 5PM - Matt Sircely and Danny Barnes 6:30 - Community Portrait + CAKE 6:45 - The Unexpected Brass Band 7:15 - Uncle Funk and the Dope Six 9PM - Glow club juggling with members of NANDA & Flying Karamazov Brothers 3 music FOOD FUN Alexa Sunshine -Rose $5 eats from: Glow Club Juggling Matt Sircely & Nadine's Kitchen Family Friendly Games Danny Barnes Friendly Nettle 70s7hemed Unexpected Brass Band Batch Brothers Costume Contest Uncle Funk & the Dope Six Free drinks & CAKE! Photo Booth & Door Prizes KEY CITY 64r FISH ,Ol COMPANY MEAT .SEAFnnn:: onu a To, 0 Copyright © 2022 The Food Co-op, All rights reserved. You chose to receive these emails when you signed up to be a member of The Food Co-op. Our mailing address is: The Food Co-op 414 Kearney St Port Townsend Port Townsend, WA 98368-8302 Add us to your address book Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list. 4 maiichimp Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 9:15 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Today in Downtown Port Townsend From: The Chamber of Jefferson County Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 9:13:13 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heidi Eisenhour Subject: Today in Downtown Port Townsend ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Vt CThe Chamber OFJEFFERSON COUNTY While some events are still virtual more and more are becoming hybrid or live so please check the chamber calendar regularly for accurate updated information. Ribbon Cuttings Are Back! Join ! April 12th 12:30 pm Flagship Marketplace 1003 Water Street, PT Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce 1 2409 Jefferson Street, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Unsubscribe heisenhourCa)co jefferson wa us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by director@jeffcountychamber.org powered by Constant Contact Try email marketing for free today! 2 Julie Shannon From: Kate Dean Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 11:43 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Pleasejoin us Wednesday for Rural Development Initiatives... From: director@forkswa.com Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 11:38:43 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Kate Dean Subject: Please join us Wednesday for Rural Development Initiatives... ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Dear Kate Dean, WE NEED YOUR NOMINATIONS FOR 2021 "BEST OF" AWARDS! Nominations for 2021 "Best Of" Business, Citizen and Volunteer of the Year are open! Don't assume someone else will nominate that wonderful citizen, volunteer, or business! Please submit your nominations by tomorrow, April 13th at Noon. We will celebrate the nominees at our May 4th meeting and announce the winners. Ways to nominate: 1) Fill out a nomination form! Nomination forms available for download or they can be picked up at the Chamber. Email them back to us or turn them in personally. 2) Simply reply back to this email or send mean email with your nomination./ will reply back that the nomination was received. Please join us Wednesday, April 12th for our weekly meeting featuring Christine Gilmore, Leadership Services Business Manager and Heidi Khokhar, Executive Director at Rural Development Initiatives. There will be a lunch special, or you can order off the menu. Our meetings take place at Blakeslee's Bar & Grill, 1222 S. Forks Avenue, Noon —1pm and are open to the public and all are welcome to attend. This is an in -person meeting. We will not have a Zoom or call -in option due to limited internet at the venue. UPCOMING PROGRAMS April 13 — Christine Gilmore, Leadership Services Business Manager and Heidi Khokhar, Executive Director at Rural Development Initiatives April 20 — Diana Reaume, QVSD Superintendent discusses new stadium project April 27 — Clallam County Commissioner Bill Peach May 4 — "Best Of" Awards and Volunteer Appreciation Luncheon FROM PENINSULA COLLEGE This next CDL course will be the last one with a guarantee of a funding option this year. Also, our Flagging class is filling up, and we want to make sure we reach out to everyone! Our final Running Start Information Night will be Wednesday, April 13th, IN PERSON at the Forks Campus! This will be the last opportunity for parents and prospective students to participate in an Information Night before the Fall Quarter, WE WANT TO DO YOUR RIBBON CUTTING CEREMONY Would you like to celebrate your new business, grand opening, re -opening, addition, or a special unveiling with a ribbon cutting ceremony? We would love to provide that service to you! Simply contact me and we will put it on the calendar. Ribbon Cutting Ceremonies make great acknowledgements for business milestones! Please join us for these Upcoming Ribbon Cutting Ceremonies: Hobucket House Open House & Quileute Family Blessing 251 Ash Avenue Wednesday, April 20th at 1pm. FORKS CHAMBER OF COMMERCE SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATION FORM AVAILABLE NOW Do you know a Forks High School graduate looking for additional scholarships? Any current graduate of Forks High School, Forks Alternative School or the Quileute Tribal High School may apply as long as they meet the requirements. Our scholarship applications are due by May 20th. Find out more on this link! SAVE THE DATE — COMMUNITY SHRED EVENT IN OCTOBER! The Forks Chamber of Commerce will be sponsoring a community shred event on Saturday, October 11t from 10am —1 pm. This gives you 5 1/2 months to go through that pile of paperwork in your closet, garage, storeroom, desk, etc. and sort it out to see what needs to be shredded in October. More details TBA. CLALLAM EDC MAKE SURE TO JOIN CLALLAM EDC'S MAILING LIST SO YOU DON'T MISS GRANT OPPORTUNITIES AND COUNTY NEWS! https:/Zchooseclailamfirst.com/ Join Shoona Riggs, Clallam County Auditor, on Wednesday on Coffee with Colleen Sam as she shares: • How Many Elected Positions are up for Election in 2022? • Which Ones are Up for Election at the State and Local Levels? • How does Someone File for Elected Office? • Who has Announced their Campaign on the PDC site? Do they have to? • What happens if no one files for a position? Does that happen frequently? • What Offices Vote Countywide vs. Just in their District? Why are they different? • Are the Districts for County, Port and PUD all the same? • What is our voter turnout rate in our county relative to other counties? • Why are some positions partisan and other are not? Plus any other Questions you've wondered about - This is your Opportunity to ask our Elections Expert! Join Zoom Meeting https:Hus02web.zoom.us/j/89474510306?pwd=VllrRHh5RG1nYVh3V3JXRzFSMmRodzO9 Meeting ID: 894 7451 0306 Passcode: 187447 One tap mobile +12532158782„89474510306#,,,,*187447# US (Tacoma) Dial by your location - 253 215 8782 (Tacoma) HELP WANTED — please share with those looking for employment �p. OR XS FORKS CHAMBER OF COMMEFtCE WANTS 70 ADD YOU TO OUR TEAM! j Doyarwerre lcbea w+e aa.A fim,NEHM aM alwayh Mua.ourer armaWuwsTVdf ranadathsrr anertashaNmemkm iro Mt V,-Bdjfine 0- CImtM and fpre wr TW4ht. pprdc5 LCdPK1S01..� Wo 11 h00)F *1 mopkwRro a6e Vnry tPi�iQ^ ar3 hne kln with`Z WAr-.TxftM NO G_t,ltil. rrort cte 111, APWaanm rued ro de erctrknnwf�.Mq¢au4e aMays4ia6k m wnrk. 34 days..eeek �:»tlsder5atwtlay an SundayP26�5 ftou,«z per weNc dep��hi n+.+aNV Nme aA Y4as, W,14 id,.* hatpins Wkpsw'.I,-$Iia+maow fxrt-04 0*-don twking h.NM using sxxh ee�,s� I roe., �1t� 8 w ro l51h and ck�+sM mF4n as aasi>trved. V<wviawa uhYm arxklnr tiaso 01Y sxperi_ds pxterred, V1— %A an VAW.14h at 2471 S, parks Me, — If you would like to share your "help wanted" ad, please send us the jpeg image of your advertisement. WEST END BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION (WEBPA) WEBPA meetings take place at the Congregational Church, 7:30am. Dues are only $10 for an individual, and $25 for a business. WEBPA is a wonderful non-profit organization that provides business networking, and through fundraising, keep our lovely town decorated for Christmas! For more information, please contact Christi Baron 360-374-3311 or cbaron(@forksforum.com FOREVER TWILIGHT IN FORKS COLLECTION & FESTIVAL FTF IS LOOKING FOR LOCAL VENDORS! Forever Twilight in Forks Festival Grand Bazaar - Friday, September 9th 9am-5pm at Ki'tla Center. All spots are outdoors, so bring your own table, chair, pop-up. We will set up in the grassy area in the SE corner and there will be high visibility from the highway. People are coming from all over and want to buy local art, photography, jewelry, Twilight-themed items and more! Spaces are only $25 each. We are offering free spaces for local non -profits, and our Quileute and Hoh neighbors! Advance registration is required. To find out more information or to register click on this link. All are welcome to shop!! FOREVER TWILIGHT IN FORKS COLLECTION Forever Twilight in Forks Collection is open NEW winter hours! Come see us Friday 2 — 4 pm and Saturday Noon — 4pm. Please see link for more details. We will be open Fridays and Saturdays from September 17, 2021 to May 21, 2022. We will begin summer hours on May 261n UPCOMING IN -PERSON EVENTS RECURRING • Tuesdays — Bingo Night @ Forks Elks Lodge • Wednesdays — Quileute Drum Group @ Quileute Akalat Center APRIL EVENTS • April 16 Forks Elks Lodge presents Easter Egg Hunt @ Tillicum Park Ball Fields • April 16 Free Entrance Day @ Olympic National Park • April 17 Annual Easter Breakfast @ Forks Elks Lodge • April 20 Ribbon Cutting for Hobucket House • April 23 Washington Coastsavers Washington Coast Cleanup (WCC) • April 29 American Elm Heritage Project Dedication & Planting Ceremony MAY EVENTS • May 1 Annual Kids Fishing Day @ Bogachiel Rearing Pond • May 4 Forks Chamber of Commerce 2021 "Best Of" Awards @ Blakeslee's Bar & Grill • May 4 Senior Lunch @ Forks Congregational Church • May 7 Mother's Day Brunch 5k sponsored by Forks Avenue Real Estate @ Rainforest Arts Center • May 7 Forks Lions Club White Cane Days Live Auction @ Blakeslee's Bar & Grill • May 8 Annual Mother's Day Breakfast @ Forks Elks Lodge • May 14-October 1 (Saturdays) Forks Open Aire Market @ Sully's Parking Lot • May 14 Richwine Road Band Live Music Fundraiser for Forks Food Bank @ The Ki'tla Center Roundhouse • May 20 Forever Twilight in Forks Collection Fifth Anniversary • May 25-August 31 (Wednesdays) Forks Logging & Mill Tours • May 28-29 The 1st Annual Forks Sasquatch Days @ Rainforest Arts Center, downtown For more events, please visit our website If you would like to submit an event for our events page, send the information to Events@Forks WA. com and include your contact details and a photo or flyer. Lissy Andros, executive director Reach me at director@forkswa.com Kari Larson, assistant to the E.D., Kari handles all of our visitor correspondence and administrative duties for the Chamber, and the online store. She is also in charge of ordering our merchandise and sending out visitor packets. Reach Kari at chamber@forkswa.com info@forkswa.com and events@forkswa.com Gay Bunnell, Forever Twilight in Forks Collection and VIC staff member. Gay is our lead staff member at the Collection, including maintaining the records for the exhibits. Reach Gay at collection@forkswa.com Wendy Sumner, Visitor Center staff member. (no email) Rob Hunter, Forever Twilight in Forks Festival volunteer and part-time staff member. Reach Rob at projects@forkswa.com Susie Michels, IT Manager. Susie runs our website and handles all technical issues. Reach Susie at webmaster@forkwa.com 2022 DUES Thank you to everyone who has sent in their dues for 2022! We will send out reminders this week. If you haven't received yours, please contact me. Thank you for your time. I hope you have a wonderful day! Best, Lissy Andros, Executive Director Forks Chamber of Commerce 1411 S. Forks Avenue Forks, WA 98331 360-k4-2531 office 903-360-4449 cell director@ ForksWA.com Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 1:48 PM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: updated information on Washington rise in overdose deaths From: Heather Freund Sent: Tuesday, April 12, 2022 1:46:34 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Heather Freund Subject: updated information on Washington rise in overdose deaths ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. For immediate release: April 5, 2022 (22-049) Contact: DOH Communications Overdose deaths in Washington top 2,000 in 2021 and continue to rise To 9 e o people , carry OLYMPIA — New data show that deaths from drug overdoses continue to increase for Washington residents. Provisional data as of April 4 show drug -related overdose deaths surpassed 2,000 in 2021, a more than 66 percent increase compared to 2019. "Overdose deaths are a public health emergency, and fentanyl is a major driver," said Tao Sheng Kwan-Gett, MD, MPH, Chief Science Officer. "What looks like a prescription oxycodone pill could be a counterfeit with more than enough fentanyl to kill. People who use drugs should assume that any drugs bought on the street, online, or from a friend has fentanyl." Overdose deaths are increasing across all groups, and more than half of these deaths are due to fentanyl. Fentanyl overdose deaths have increased about 10-fold since 2016. Most deaths involved more than one substance, notably psychostimulants like methamphetamine. A majority of people dying from overdose tend to be male and 45 years old or younger, and the increase in overdose deaths is fastest growing among Black, Latinx, and Native American/Alaska Native people. "The continued increase in overdose deaths is alarming, but there are things we can all do to save lives. Carrying naloxone can make the difference between life and death in many overdose situations." said Dr. Kwan-Gett. "It can be effective for all opioids, including fentanyl, but in some cases may require more than one dose to reverse an overdose." People should consider carrying at least two doses of naloxone to help prevent deaths from opioid overdose. Naloxone is available at many community organizations and pharmacies in Washington. To access naloxone at a pharmacy, call ahead to make sure they have it in stock and show this standing order to the pharmacist, which is a prescription for everyone in the state to use. Use this link to find naloxone near you. More information on opioids and naloxone can be found here: • _DOH Opioid Overdose Prevention and Surveillance. • How to find Naloxone • Learn how to prevent an overdose • Washington State Drug Overdose: Monthly Updates • Tips on harm reduction For those who use drugs and want to stop or cut back, help is available. Buprenorphine and methadone, two medications that treat opioid use disorder (MOOD), can cut the risk of a fatal opioid overdose in half and reduce cravings and withdrawal. If you or someone you know wants treatment or just wants to learn more, see the Washington Recovery Helpline MOUD Locator, or call 1-866-789-1511. Visit the DOH Newsroom for all news releases. Subscribe to get news releases in Spanish. You will continue to receive the English version. Washington State Department of Health is your source for a healthy dose of information. To request this document in another format, call 1-800-525-0127. Deaf or hard of hearing customers, please call 711 (Washington Relay) or email civil.riahts@doh.wa.aov Manage Subscriptions I Unsubscribe ! Help Heather Freund General Crime Advocate/Outreach Coordinator Dove House Advocacy Services 360.385.5292 24 hour crisis line: 360.385.5291 Advococy Services httP://dovehouseic.org Dove House Advocacy Services Dove House provides crisis intervention, shelter, and advocacy for victims domestic violence. Dove House also serves victims of sexual assault and general crimes. dove housej'c:.carg httPs://www.giveiefferson.org/ CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This e-mail message, including any attachments, is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure, or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender by reply e-mail and destroy all copies of the original message 3 jeffbocc From: Barbara Morey <bemorey@yahoo.com> Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2022 11:31 AM To: Kathy Morgan; Cherish Cronmiller Cc: jeffbocc Subject: Fw: Sand Point Cottage Housing breaks ground; Sound Foundations NW builds 200th tiny home! ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Just FYI: Perhaps this scaled down version of a community -based village of transitional housing cottages (420sq ft each) would be an appropriate and workable alternative for the Mill Rd location's long term development. It seems to be worth exploring further, especially if OlyCAP obtains a long term lease of the property from the county and the county retains ownership as in this model. This cottage community could include permanent supported housing without the "institutional" setting of a single building. Or simply, permanently affordable housing for those transitioning from homelessness. An associated RV park on the property could also provide temporary shelter services. It takes the whole village... Barbara Morey, Housing Advocate 206 326-9022 Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android ----- Forwarded Message ----- From: "Low Income Housing Institute" <info@lihi.org> To: "bemorey@yahoo.com" <bemorey@yahoo.com> Sent: Wed, Apr 13, 2022 at 10:45 AM Subject: Sand Point Cottage Housing breaks ground; Sound Foundations NW builds 200th tiny home! 0 Sand Point Cottage Housing breaks ground x x The Low Income Housing Institute (LIHI) is pleased to announce the groundbreaking of Sand Point Cottage Housing located at 6343 NE 65th St. This 22-cottage development will serve singles, couples and families exiting homelessness. The project is expected to be completed in November. LIHI is the owner/developer, the architect is Karen DeLucas Architecture and the contractor is Buchanan General Contracting. Six of the cottages were built in part by students in construction trade pre -apprenticeship programs, including the Seattle Skills Center at Ingraham High School, Rainier Beach High School, Rogers High School, Tulalip TERO Pre - apprenticeship Program, Marysville Regional Apprenticeship Pathways (RAP) Program, and the Seattle Sand Point Summer Construction Training Program run by LIHI. The plans originally called for students to build all the cottages, but this had to be curtailed due to pandemic restrictions. Rendering by Karen DeLucas Architecture Each cottage features one -bedroom, a living room, kitchen, bathroom, a loft and a front porch. The Community House features community living space and community kitchen, property management office, a bathroom and a laundry room. Extensive landscaping, gardens, children's play space, pathways and parking complete the design. Sharon Lee, LIHI Executive Director said, "Sand Point Cottage Housing is an innovative program to provide attractive cottages in a beautiful park setting. I am thrilled that the State Housing Trust Fund is supporting permanent affordable housing on city -owned land in Magnuson Park for families, couples and singles who have been homeless. We appreciate the mayor and city council providing the long-term lease to make this cottage housing possible." Seattle City Council Budget Chair Teresa Mosqueda said, "This innovative project is the result of strong partnership with our State partners, LIHI, construction trades pre -apprenticeship programs, and the City of Seattle to provide over 36 new neighbors with a warm, affordable place to call home. Through a long-term lease on the land to LIHI at a deep discount of $1 a year, this City -owned property will help provide z critically needed low-income housing in the community, with a community garden and outdoor space, and common spaces to gather." LIHI Board Vice President Melinda Nichols said, "Sand Point Cottages will demonstrate the value of a village setting and the viability of a green, low impact, nontraditional housing option. LIHI has developed over 700 tiny houses and building individual cottages with bathrooms and kitchens is a logical next step. We thank the Department of Commerce, City of Seattle, KeyBank, Lucky 7 Foundation, NeighborWorks America and other funders for the vision to make this project a reality." The Community House was donated by the Lucky 7 Foundation. Extensive infrastructure work was required on this 84,500 SF site. The cottages average 450 SF. The construction contract is $5,167,000. Funding sources include the Washington State Housing Trust Fund, KeyBank, Enterprise, NeighborWorks America, Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta, and Lucky 7 Foundation. See KIRO coverage LIHI Board VP Melinda Nichols Architect Karen DeLucas � � 0 LIHI thanked John Backus of the Lucky 7 LIHI Housing Developer Foundation for funding the Community Aisaya Corbray House Construction is scheduled to be completed in November of this year Sound Foundations NW completes 200th tiny home! Sound Foundation NW volunteers at LIHI's Hope Factory in Sodo 3 Barb Oliver, director of Sound Foundations NW reports, "MILESTONE DAY TODAY as we came together to build Glory, our 200th home! The average stay in a tiny home is 114 days, which means 3 people per year transition through each tiny home, built to last 20 years. That means in the lifetime of each home, up to 60 people will transition. Times 200 equals 12,000 PEOPLE OFF THE STREETS! Mind-blowing, isn't it?! The group pictured represents the hundreds and hundreds of huge - hearted volunteers that we have. I am so proud of all of you I could just burst!" LIHI thanks Barb and Sound Foundations NW for their amazing dedication to building homes for homeless people! Housing for All! Sharon Lee Executive Director i Low Income Housing Institute f 1253 S Jackson Street , Suite A , Seattle, WA 98144 Unsubscribe bemorey(a yahoo com Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by info@lihi.org powered by x Try email marketing for free today! 4 From: Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center <annualgiving@fredhutch.org> Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2022 12:01 PM To: jeffbocc Subject: Donate your vehicle to Fred Hutch ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. At Fred Hutch, our scientists search for cures in unlikely places. Like your garage. Your old car, truck, motorcycle, boat, or RV can help fuel lifesaving research when you donate it to Fred Hutch. Donating your vehicle is easy, plus we'll tow it at no cost to you! What can I donate? All vehicles are considered! We accept cars, trucks, trailers, boats, RVs, motorcycles, campers, off -road vehicles, heavy equipment, and most other motorized vehicles. If it has wheels, we'll likely take it. My car hasn't run in years. Can I still donate it? 1 jeffbocc From: Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center <annualgiving@fredhutch.org> Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2022 12:01 PM To: jeffbocc Subject: Donate your vehicle to Fred Hutch ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. l i + ■- w r .. ■ . ■ s r O► u Viewas webpage At Fred Hutch, our scientists search for cures in unlikely places. Like your garage. Your old car, truck, motorcycle, boat, or RV can help fuel lifesaving research when Donating your vehicle is easy, plus we'll tow it at no cost to you! What can I donate? All vehicles are considered! We accept cars, trucks, trailers, boats, RVs, motorcycles, campers, off -road vehicles, heavy equipment, and most other motorized vehicles. If it has wheels, we'll likely take it. My car hasn't run in years. Can I still donate it? 1 t vehicles, running or not. However, it must have an engine Yes! We can accept mos and be towable. How will my car be Once you have provided have your vehicle picked low "V lowr� w 1100 Fairview Ave. N. 1 Mail Stop J 5-2001 Seattle, WA 98109 fredhutch.org If you don't want to receive further email updates from Fred Hutch, you can change your email preferences. rD 2022 Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center. All rights reserved. Privacy policy. jeffbocc From: Washington State Department of Commerce <WAStateCommerce@public.govdelivery.com> Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2022 1:01 PM To: jeffbocc Subject: Planners' Update Newsletter - April 2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Having trouble viewing this email? View it online Planners' Governor's 2022 Smart Communities• nominations• open "The future's 'rea% for make Stevens. Things aregrowing." JOM . Former M3p01 RrAl G06% MAYor Ross Vhtght;%orrrrmim ly 00W,deVTft,tit ffifet ; Nominate your projects through May 6 Nominations are open now for the 16 th annual Governor's Smart Communities Awards. You can submit nominations for outstanding long-term community planning and development work by local governments and their partners. The program recognizes outstanding efforts to create vibrant and livable communities while achieving Growth Management Act goals, smart planning and other community development objectives. Well -planned communities provide great examples, often offering a diversity of leadership and problem solving as a guide for our entire state. Review the nomination guidelines for theses seven categories: • "New" Planning Legacy Award • Smart Climate Change Strategies Award • Smart Eguity Strategies Award • Smart Housing Strategies Award • Smart Partnership Award • Smart Proiects Award • Smart Vision Award Nominations will be accepted through May 6, 2022. Stay tuned for weekly additions to our Smart Communities playlist� for videos from last year's winners. HAPI awards update Second round of Housing Action Plan Implementation grants awarded In 2021, the Legislature appropriated $5 million for jurisdictions planning.under the Growth Management Act (GMA) to adopt new housing action plans (HAPs) under RCW 36.70A.600 or strategies from adopted housing action plan implementation (HAPI). In November 2021, 44 communities received $3.5 million in grants. We are finalizing awards to more than 20 additional cities for the remaining $1.5 million, including funding for partially planning jurisdictions. Once the details are finalized in the next few weeks, a full award list will be posted on the grants webpage. as •114111111-111700 110 Six communities receive funding from the Transportation Improvement Board Commerce nominated 10 local government for Complete Street grant awards from the Transportation Improvement Board (TIB). Of those, six jurisdictions received a total of $2.15 million for their work planning and building streets to accommodate all users, including pedestrians, transit access, cyclists, and motorists of all ages and abilities. Awards were announced at the TIB's March board meeting in Vancouver, Washington. Commerce -nominated jurisdictions receiving an award this year were: • Clark County: $750,000 • Issaquah: $500,000 • Othello: $400,000 • Tonasket: $50,000 • Tukwila: $400,000 • Twisp: $50,000 Grants are awarded every two years. Jurisdictions must have an adopted Complete Streets ordinance to be eligible for nomination. Only TIB-approved nominators, like Commerce, can submit jurisdictions for the grant awards. Additional information about Complete Streets policies is on the MRSC and Smart Growth America webpages. For more information about TIB's funding opportunities, visit its Grant Programs webpage. w Daniel Cambre joins as our Housing Contracts Specialist Daniel Cambre is taking the lead on our contract management system (CMS) for housing grants, including getting HAPI contracts out the door. In addition to supporting invoicing of housing grants, he will also support the housing team as we provide technical assistance to grantees. Daniel spent several years working in his hometown of Austin, Texas. He supported planning efforts for first responders and working with citizens on city ordinances. Daniel served four years in the Marine Corps and received his bachelor's degree in business administration from Texas State University. He lives in Bellingham with his wife and family. In his spare time, Daniel enjoys collecting vinyl records, and has been known to attend large vinyl records conferences. You can reach Daniel at Daniel. Cam bre(a)commerce.wa.gov or by calling 360-725- 2921. Reminder: PAW Annual Conference registration ends April 9 Register now to attend the April event The Annual Conference is April 27-29 at Campbell's Resort in Chelan. Registration ends April 19. Mobile workshops are available, and Commerce will host an in-house short course on housing. There will also be Technical Assistance Roundtables where folks can network and share ideas. Counties might be able to get assistance for registration costs from the Washington Counties Risk Pool(WCRP) . Contact WCRP for more information at memberservices@_wcrp.wa.gov. For more information about the event, contact PAW at info@planningpaw.or . Eastern Washington Planners' Forum coming April 27 Commerce is hosting a free virtual forum for Eastern Washington planners from 9- 11 a.m. Wednesday, April 27. Registration is open now. Forum topics include climate programs and a presentation from the Washington State Department of Ecology on Wetland Critical Areas Ordinances (CAO) Guidance. The forum will be one of the first opportunities to see the new CAO Guidance coming from the Department of Ego�lo this summer. Remember, folks earning American Planning Association (AICP) credits will receive 1.5 credits for attending. Learn more about Commerce's regional forums at the Growth Management Planners' Forum webpage. Ecology wetland CAO Guidance update Ecology will have a public comment period DEPARTMENT OF for its new Wetland Critical Areas Ordinances (CAO) Guidance. The Wetlands team will delve into the proposed changes ia State'of Washington and open the public comment period in May. There will be conversations about "mitigation guidance," language changes, new policies and better access to reference materials. Preliminary drafts have been sent to the Association of WgLhin_qton Cities and Washington State Association of Counties. Contact Nate Brown to request a copy of the preliminary draft. Washington Geological Survey supports GMA Tricia Sears, new geologic planning liaison, aims to connect science and decision -making The Washington Geolo (WGS) welcomed Tricia Sears as the new geologic planning liaison in January 2022. Tricia will focus on geologic hazards, mineral resources and climate resilience. Tricia will liaison with Commerce and other agencies to foster collaboration and the integration of scientific resources in the GMA. She is essential in sharing WGS resources with agencies and helping understand agency needs to better inform future WGS science. Tricia will work with planners, geologists and other professionals in local, state, federal and Tribal jurisdictions across Washington. WGS believes a multi- disciplinary approach of science and policy helps build resilient communities. You can reach Tricia at tricia.sears(ccDdnr.wa.gov and 360-628-2867. For more information, visit the WGS website. Cultural e o r e Protection Summitis May 25-26 15t" Cultural Resource Protection Summit is May 25-26 in Suquamish. It is hosted by the Suquamish Tribe. It will be a hybrid conference, so in -person or virtual attendance is possible. Space is capped for the in -person event. ColonialismFrom 1r o The theme is "From Colonialism to Collaboration." It will include panel discussions, lightning talks and experiential activities. It will highlight links between cultural resource management and responsible land use. Student rates are available by contacting Mary Rossi at mare _eppardvision_org Register online to attend virtually or in person. The Short Course on local planning offers an overview of land use planning laws in Washington, an introduction to comprehensive planning and plan implementation under the GMA, and a review of roles in planning and mandatory training on the Open Public Meetings Act for local government officials. All courses are online, free and open to the public. Following a break for the summer, courses will resume in the fall. Month Date Time Registration April Thursday, 4/21 1 - 4 p.m. EM May Tuesday, 5/31 6 - 9 p.m. June Monday, 6/20 1 - 4 p.m Ask about local presentations Commerce also offers e-visits to local planning commissions or other meetings. Contact your !g al planner to request a presentation. Topics include, but are not limited to, comprehensive plan basics and roles in the planning process. Subscribe to our Planners Update Do you have new staff or know of someone who would like to learn more about planning news in Washington? Please share these easy steps to subscribe to Commerce's Growth Management mailing list and receive our monthly Planners' Update newsletter: 1. Visit .commerce.wa.gov. 2. Scroll all the way down to the "Subscribe" section in the page footer. 3. Enter your email and select "submit" to choose subscriptions you would like to receive. (You can unsubscribe from any list at any time.) 4. Under the "Public Infrastructure" category, select "Growth Management" to receive this newsletter and other GMS updates. Commerce works with local governments, businesses, community -based organizations and tribes to strengthen communities. The department's diverse portfolio of more than 100 programs and effective public and private partnerships promote sustainable community and economic development to help all Washingtonians thrive. For more information, visit http://www.commerce.wa.gov, For information on locating or expanding a business in Washington, visit choosewashingtonstate.com. Update your subscriptions, modify your password or email address, or stop subscriptions at any time on your Subscriber Preferences Page. You will need to use your email address to log in. If you have questions or problems with the subscription service, please visit subscriberhelp,govdeliverv.com. This service is provided to you at no charge by Washington Department of Commerce Subscribe I Manage Preferences I Unsubscribe All I Help I Contact us This email was sent to jeffbocc@co.jefferson.wa.us using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: Washington State Department of Commerce - 1011 Plum Street SE, P.O. Box 42525 • Olympia, WA 98504- 2525 Julie Shannon From: Greg Brotherton Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2022 4:02 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: COVID-19 Bi-weekly Report - 4/12/2022 From: Village Council Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2022 4:00:13 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Greg Brotherton Subject: COVID-19 Bi-weekly Report - 4/12/2022 ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. 1�1od' The Two -Week COVID-19 Case Rate in Jefferson County is: ,�-der l,'t a� r F High: Strongly recommended that everyone mask in public, Indoor settings a w Moderate: Recommended that everyone mask in public. Indoor settings POR Low: Recommended that those at higher risk of severe Illness or those with household members at higher risk wear a mask indoors, but f « i safer for lower -risk populations to unmask Very Low: Safer for everyone, Including higher -risk populations, to unmask " M 1 ,d M a: � 1►, �e #ee Positive All Time Percent 00 1! ,..' '!Totat Tests,Administered + , M I '• # i Total Cases Ever Hospitalized Total Cases Currently Hospitalized Active Cases in Isolation pm, Fri: 2 4 pm). In February 2022, we expanded our services and now offer no cost opioid overdose medication and training to the public during our business hours. See the full press release HERE Resources . jeffersoncountypublichealth.org/1429/covid-19 • coronavirus.wa.gov/information-for/you-and-your- famiy/safer-gatherings • cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/index.html • doh.wa.gov/Portals/1/Documents/1600/coronavirus/821- 133-Behaviora l HealthTipsGetti ngTheVacci ne. pdf • doh wa.gov/Portals/l/Documents/1600/coronavirus/348- 804-COVID19VaccinesWhatToKnow.pdf • COVID-19 Data Dashboard Washington State Department of Health Wash Hands Maintain Distance Wear a Mask 4 MORIMM I MWAREMM• Your Village Council is a 501 (c) (3) non-profit corporation whose purpose is to be a unifying force and information conduit for the benefit of all Port Ludlow residents. Port Ludlow Village Council I Post Office Box 65012, Port Ludlow, WA 98365 Unsubscribe qbrotherton0co.iefferson.wa.us Update Profile I Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by portludlowvillagecouncileblast@gmail.com W1 Julie Shannon From: Heidi Eisenhour Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2022 8:33 AM To: Julie Shannon Subject: FW: Penny Wise timber sale Attachments: PENNY WISE_Sale_Maps.pdf From: ROSANBALM, DREW (DNR) Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2022 8:30:51 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) To: Greg Brotherton; Kate Dean; Heidi Eisenhour; Jeff Chapman; chief@qfr.org Cc: Griswold, Mona (DNR); Hurn, David (DNR); Emmons, Duane (DNR) Subject: Penny Wise timber sale ALERT: BE CAUTIOUS This email originated outside the organization. Do not open attachments or click on links if you are not expecting them. Greetings, I hope this email finds you all well. We are getting ready to post the SEPA for Penny Wise timber sale for public comment. This sale is 98% Jefferson County Forest Board Trust with a projected revenue of $1,200,000 to Jefferson County. It is located in tax district 320. 1 have attached the timber sale maps for reference. If you have any concerns or questions I can be reached as shown below. Drew Rosanbalm Assistant Region Manager- State Lands Olympic Region Cell 360-640-0495 drew.rosanbalm@dnr.wa.gov DRIVING MAP SALE NAME: PENNYWISE AGREEMENT#: 30-102261 T0WNSHIP(S): T27R2W TRUST(S): Common School and Indemnity (3), State Forest Transfer (1) 9M PT-Q-3130 / Waterline Rd Timber Sale Unit Haul Route Other Road Highway • Distance Indicator El Milepost Markers 0 1 Gate Rock Pit PT Q-3000 I REGION: Olympic Region COUNTY(S): Jefferson ELEVATION RGE:440-880 Map may not be to scale DRIVING DIRECTIONS: Units 1-6: Turn right from U.S. Hwy 101 onto Rd PT-Q-3000 (Penny Creek Rd) about 1.4 mi southwest of Quilcene (MP 296). Drive west for 1.5 mi, turn left onto Rd PT-Q-3100, cross the creek, and continue south for 0.9 mi to Rd PT-Q-3130 (Waterline Rd). Turn right (NW) onto the PT-Q-3130 and drive 0.5 mi to Unit 1 and 0.7 - 0.8 mi to Units 2 and 3. Unit 4 can be accessed via a short hike east at 1.3 mi on the PT-Q-3130. To reach Units 5 and 6, stay right at the PT-Q-3000/PT-Q-3100 intersection to remain on the PT-Q-3000, and continue another 1.5 mi to Unit 5 and 2.0 mi to Unit 6. Units 5 and 6 can also be accessed from the PT-Q-3130. See the other driving map for directions to Unit 7 and Penny Rock Pit. 1-i Prepared By: pdun490 Modification Date:pdun490 1/18/2022 DRIVING MAP SALE NAME: PENNYWISE REGION: Olympic Region AGREEMENT#:30-102261 COUNTY(S): Jefferson TOWNSHIP(S): T27R2W ELEVATION RGE: 440-880 TRUST (S) : Common School and Indemnity (3), State Forest Transfer (1) Timber Sale Unit Haul Route Other Road Highway • Distance Indicator Milepost Markers • T Gate Rock Pit DRIVING DIRECTIONS: Unit 7 and Penny Rock Pit Turn right from U.S. Hwy 101 onto Rd PT-Q-3000 (Penny Creek Rd) about 1.4 mi southwest of Quilcene (MP 296), drive 1.1 mi, then turn right (N) onto Rd PT-Q-2000. To reach Unit 7, follow the PT-Q-2000 for 1.1 mi to its junction with Rd PT-Q-2400. The unit can be reached via three routes from this point. For eastern access, continue 0.7 mi north on the PT-Q-2000. Alternatively, turn left (W) onto the PT-Q-2400, stay right (N) at the junction with Rd PT-Q-2420 at 0.3 mi, and continue another 0.5 mi to the end of the PT-Q-2400. For direct western access to Unit 7, head west and north on the PT-Q-2420 for 0.7 mi from its junction with the PT-Q-2400. Penny Rock Pit is reached via Rd PT-Q-2200, accessed through a gate at 0.6 mi on the PT-Q-2000 (AA-1 key). See the other driving map for directions to Units 1-6. Prepared By: pdun490 Modification Date:pdun490 1/18/2022 TIMBER SALE MAP SALE NAME: PENNYWISE REGION: Olympic Region AGREEMENT #: 30-102261 COUNTY(S): Jefferson TOWNSHIP(S): T27R2W ELEVATION RGE: 440-880 TRU ST(S): Common School and Indemnity (3), State Forest Transfer (1) 122°56.5'W 122°56'W 122°55.5'W ....... .......... ........... A..... ....... .......... ............. ................ .. ......li ................... ..... 3 ................ ...... ............. 5 ] \a Unit 4 4 Private llo 19ac ���-�> ♦ �a E* 40 Q 1a 15 z r N o USFS/5 °E� o o R/W 4a�` ' 0.9 ac 4 4 AI N%. r^^t►7'�2 USFS t , Jeff r s o n I I� t;r Ztt�: .4 ac 0.4 +� V,, 41 'S , 2 ♦ 4 ru PT-Q-3130.4 4 i USFS Unit 1 8 ac 0 500 1,000 2,000 Feet 122°56.5'W Unit 3 5 ac R/W 0.4 ac PT-Q-3130.3 U' o 0 0 d m a 122°56'W Unit 2 11 ac i All State Unless Otherwise N 1 122'S5.5'W Timber Sale Unit (VRH) - - - Sale Boundary Tags o Existing Road ® Proposed Landing • Leave Tree Area - - Leave Tree Area Tags = _ = Required Construction J� Designated Crossing Riparian Management Zone ! A A Hazard Abatement Optional Construction -.._. Wetland Management Zone ,. r,.- Flag Line Required Reconstruction Stream Type Wetland > Stream Optional Reconstruction Water Type Break Public Land Survey Townships Required Pre -haul Maintenance Ali- < 0.25 ac Wetland Public Land Survey Sections _ _ _ - Right -of -Way =Am Optional Pre -haul Maintenance ♦ Survey Monument DNR-Managed Lands Prepared By: pdun490 Modification Date: pdun490 1/18/2022 TIMBER SALE MAP SALE NAME: PENNYWISE AGREEMENT #: 30-102261 TOWNSHIP(S): T27R2W TRUST(S): Common School and Indemnity (3), State Forest Transfer (1) 122°56.5'W _...... f ... 122056'W y__..... //.__ '- Private E USFS Spur 1+60 39 Z y S 00 O �d m C [ a 3 ♦.:. 4 k° USFS r PT-Q-3200 - F it 5 ac Spur1+50 Unit 6 24 ac Spur 1+00 USFS Private' a 0 500 1,000 2,000 Feet .if__A I ....... ii ..� r�ry al- \ ) _. 122°56.5'W 122°56'W 122°55.5'W 0 PT-Q-2400� �al 122°55.5'W REGION: Olympic Region COUNTY(S): Jefferson ELEVATION RGE: 440-880 122°55'W o r O + PT-Q-2450 0 R/W Cd 0.3 ac a All State Unless Otherwise'Noted 122°55'W Timber Sale Unit (VRH) - - - Sale Boundary Tags o Existing Road ® Proposed Landing ^° Leave Tree Area - - Leave Tree Area Tags -_= Required Construction � Designated Crossing Riparian Management Zone •! A Hazard Abatement Optional Construction ::w Wetland Management Zone f f,s_ Flag Line Required Reconstruction ❑ Stream Type Wetland > — Stream '� Optional Reconstruction Water Type Break Q Public Land Survey Townships _ _ >® Required Pre -haul Maintenance -�L_ < 0.25 ac Wetland Public Land Survey Sections _ _ Right -of -Way =A: Optional Pre -haul Maintenance ♦ Survey Monument DNR-Managed Lands Z Prepared By: pdun490 Modification Date: pdun490 1/18/2022 LOGGING PLAN MAP SALE NAME: PENNYWISE REGION: Olympic Region A G R E E M E N T#: 30-102261 C0UNTY(S): Jefferson TOWNSHIP(S): T27R2W ELEVATION RGE: 440-880 TRUST (S) : Common School and Indemnity (3), State Forest Transfer (1) 0 250 500 1,000 Feet � Shovel / Seasonal Skidder (VRH) f__j DNR-Managed Lands Seasonal Shovel (VRH) > Stream ® Cable (VRH) 00 Restored Stream HUR Leave Tree Area Contours 40 ft Wetland Wetland Management Zone 1W Flag Line w' Riparian Management Zone Sale Boundary Tags .. County Boundaries — — Leave Tree Area Tags Public Land Survey Sections Yarding Public Land Survey Townships " Hazard Abatement 600,._ I State Unless Otherwise Noted ❑ Stream Type ~ Right -of -Way _ ~ Right -of -Way 0.25 ac We land Required Construction �Optional Construction ./( Designated rossing Required Reconstruction ® Proposed Lai iding —o Optional Reconstruction * Proposed Tat hold is Required Pre -haul Maintenance o A Optional Pre -haul Maintenance © Utility Box O Existing Road Survey Monu ent Water Type Break Prepared By: pdun490 Modification Date: pdun490 1/18/2022 LOGGING PLAN MAP SALE NAME: PENNYWISE REGION: Olympic Region A G R E E M E N T#: 30-102261 C0UNTY(S): Jefferson TOWNSHIP(S): T27R2W ELEVATION RGE: 440-880 T R U S T (S) : Common School and Indemnity (3), State Forest Transfer (1) �Shovel I Seasonal Skidder (VRH) DNR-Managed Lands Seasonal Shovel (VRH) > Stream ® Cable (VRH) 00 Restored Stream MINE Leave Tree Area - Contours 40 R Wetland Wetland Management Zone ~Flag Line ^: Riparian Management Zone-- Sale Boundary Tags ,.. County Boundaries - - Leave Tree Area Tags QPublic Land Survey Sections —► Yarding Public Land Survey Townships A,` Hazard Abatement ❑ Stream Typi Right -of -Way Right -of -Way Required Construction ) �Optional Construction Jl Designated T_a Required Reconstruction ® Proposed L -� Optional Reconstruction Required Pre -haul Maintenance * Proposed T =A Optional Pre -haul Maintenance © Utility Box O Existing Road Survey Mor Water Type Break Prepared By: pdun490 Modification Date: pdun490 1/18/2022 LOGGING PLAN MAP SALE NAME: PENNYWISE REGION: Olympic Region AGREEMENT#:30-102261 COUNTY(S): Jefferson TOWNSHIP(S): T27R2W ELEVATION RGE: 440-880 TRU ST(S): Common School and Indemnity (3), State Forest Transfer (1) Shovel / Seasonal Skidder (VRH) Zn DNR-Managed Lands Seasonal Shovel (VRH) > Stream QCable (VRH) 00 Restored Stream wasnsa I;;;;®p: Leave Tree Area Ii Wetland --- Contours 40 It I~ . Wetland Management Zone OW Flag Line _:,•. Riparian Management Zone — ^- Sale Boundary Tags County Boundaries — — Leave Tree Area Tags Q Public Land Survey Sections —► Yarding ® Public Land Survey Townships Hazard Abatement ❑ Stream Type J Right -of -Way J Right -of -Way .ilt. < 0.25 ac WE tlancIN = _ Required Construction )) �Optional Construction Jl Designated Grossin Required Reconstruction —o Optional Reconstruction ® Proposed La iding * Proposed Tai hold Ill Required Pre -haul Maintenance =A Optional Pre -haul Maintenance © Utility Box O Existing Road Survey Mon fn ent Water Type Break Prepared By: pdun490 Modification Date: pdun490 1/18/2022 LOGGING PLAN MAP SALE NAME: PENNYWISE REGION: Olympic Region AGREEMENT#: 30-102261 COUNTY(S): Jefferson TOWNSHIP(S): T27R2W ELEVATION RGE: 440-880 TRUST(S): Common School and Indemnity (3), State Forest Transfer (1) Privateti�o' _ Ope � soa a k �Sfi I 33 �. 6 tih3si t r L S a &I cc S airs t _� USFS '�rrtl= ► ` ,�i 'iri`r `;srtl 1 r - 6irr � iti rrrr 1 Jefferson M M a N' USFS 0 250 500 1,000 Feet ... ........ 1 z: ....... 1 4 t ..� r ;_ �•• Unit6 x �� 00 Q As- r-. 0 o g i .o r 2 0 a Co 3 All St ate Unless Otherwise Noted , Shovel /Seasonal Skidder (VRH) DNR-Managed Lands El Stream Type WM Seasonal Shovel (VRH) Stream _ Right -of -Way .t�. < 0.25 ac Wetland ®Cable (VRH) Restored ream O O Rd St -' - Required Construction - - - q )) ac'HIII Leave Tree Area `° . ----- Contours 40 ft Optional Construction ./l Designated Crossing Wetland /fj%Flag Line #=t--4 Required Reconstruction C� Wetland Management Zone Optional Reconstruction ® Proposed Landing Riparian Management Zone - - Sale Boundary Tags * proposed Tailhold -� .. County Boundaries - - Leave Tree Area Tags ® Required Pre -haul Maintenance Optional Pre Maintenance © Utility Box Public Land Survey Sections —► Yarding =A -haul Public Land Survey Townships Road Survey Monument AL Hazard Abatement water � Water Type Break T Prepared By: pdun490 Modification Date: pdun490 1/18/2022 LOGGING PLAN MAP SALE NAME: PENNYWISE AGREEMENT#: 30-102261 TOWNSHIP(S): T27R2W TRUST(S): Common School and Indemnity (3), State Forest Transfer (1) REGION: Olympic Region COUNTY(S): Jefferson ELEVATION RGE: 440-880 Shovel / Seasonal Skidder (VRH) DNR-Managed Lands ❑ Stream Type (VRH) Seasonal Shovel VRH � Stream _ y Right -of -Way .iL. < 0.25 ac Wetland Q Cable (VRH) O O Restored Stream _ _ Z Required Construction q ) L"B" Leave Tree Area Contours 40 It —, Optional Construction ./l Designated Crossing Wetland Wetland Management Zone ~Flag Lined Required Reconstructiong ® Proposed Landing Riparian Management Zone —— Sale Boundary Tags Optional Reconstruction * Proposed Tailhold County Boundaries — — Leave Tree Area Tags Required Pre -haul Maintenance © Box Public Land Survey Sections 1. Yarding = Optional Pre -haul Maintenance A Utility Public Land survey Townships A,` Hazard Abatement OExisting Road water Type Break Survey Monument Prepared By: pdun490 Modification Date: pdun490 1/18/2022